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ON THE 


DOMESTICATED ANIMALS 


OF THE 


BRITISH ISLANDS. 


: 
H ge 
a ee 


ON THE 


DOMESTICATED ANIMALS 


OF THE 


BRITISH ISLANDS: 


COMPREHENDING | 


THE NATURAL AND ECONOMICAL HISTORY ‘OF 
SPECIES AND VARIETIES ; 


THE DESCRIPTION OF 


THE PROPERTIES OF EXTERNAL FORM ; 


AND OBSERVATIONS ON 


THE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF BREEDING. 


BY DAVID LOW, ESQ., F.R.S.E., 


PROFESSOR OF AGRICULTURE IN THE UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH ; 


MEMBER OF THE ROYAL ACADEMY OF AGRICULTURE OF SWEDEN, AND OF THE ROYAL ECONOMICAL 
SOCIETY OF SAXONY 3; HONORARY AND CORRESPONDING MEMBER OF THE ECONOMICAL SOCIETY _ 
OF LEIPZIG, AND OF THE SOCIETY OF AGRICULTURE AND BOTANY OF UTRECHT 5 
CORRESPONDING MEMBER OF THE “ CONSEIL ROYAL D’AGRICULTULE DE 
FRANCE 3? OF THE “ SOCIETE ROYALE ET CENTRALE,” &c. 


LONDON: 
LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, & LONGMANS. 
MDCCCXLY. | 


PRINTED BY NEILL AND COMPANY, CLD FISHMAREET, EDINBURGH. 


PREFACK. 


From early times, Great Britain has been distin- 
guished for the numbers and excellence of the Animals 
reared for the uses of the inhabitants. The cultivation 
of the Horse began in the earlier periods of our history, 
for the purposes of war and the tournament, and has 
- subsequently been carried to great perfection, for the 
race-course, the chase, the saddle, and for draught. 
The cultivation of Sheep was early the subject of pub- 
lic attention, and, as being connected with the woollen — 
manufactures of the country, was favoured by numerous 
laws; and within a period comparatively recent, extra- 
ordinary attention has been devoted to the means of 
cultivating animals for human food. It is during this 
latter era, which began about the middle of last cen- 
tury, that the greatest additions have been made to the 
value of the Live-stock of the country, and that the 
practice of breeding has been reduced to a system, and 


founded upon principles. 
Of the species of the Domesticated Animals natural- 


oe 


oe PREFACE. 


ized in the British Islands, numerous varieties present 
themselves, to which we apply the term Breeds. The 
characters of species may have been imprinted by ori- 
ginal organization, or may have been the result of laws 
of organic development and change, of whose nature 
and operation we are ignorant. The characters which 
distinguish varieties are those which may reasonably be 
ascribed to known agencies, as climate, and the supplies 
of food. The differences of character, indeed, produced 
by agencies of this kind, may be very great; and, in 
the case of many animals, the naturalist may be left in 
doubt, whether the differences observed are the result 
of original organization, or of more recent changes. 
But however species may have originated, or varieties 
have been produced, all animals submitted to domesti- 
cation are subject to modifications of size, form, and 
other characters, dependent on the conditions under 
which they are reared ; and by breeding, we can com- 
municate the distinctive properties of parents to the 
progeny. 

Tn the rural economy of this country, a high degree 
of importance is to be ascribed to a knowledge of the 
distinctive characters of Races or Breeds. Much of 
the profit of the owners depends upon adapting the 
breed of any animal to the circumstances in which it 
is to be placed. By rearing, for example, a breed of 
| large and delicate oxen, in a country unsuited, from its 


natural or artificial productions, to maintain it, we 


| incur the hazard of loss in various ways; while, on the 


PREFACE. Vil 


other hand, by rearing an inferior breed in situations 
where one of greater value could be maintained, we 
deprive ourselves of the profit which the natural or 
acquired advantages of our situation present. 

An error of another kind is the subject of constant 
observation, the result likewise of imperfect knowledge 
of the distinctive characters of breeds. For the pro- 
curing of a breed adapted to the situation in which it 
is to be reared, two general methods may be pursued ; 
either a new breed may be substituted for that which 
exists, or the old one may have its characters modified 
or changed by crossing with other races. There are 
many cases in which scarcely an error can be commit- 
ted in our practice in these respects, provided we resort 
to a really superior race; but there are many other 
cases in which a change of this kind may be injurious, 
or attended with doubtful benefit. - Animals become 
eradually adapted to the conditions in which they are 
placed, and many breeds have accordingly become ad- 
mirably suited to the physical state of the country in 


which they have been naturalized. Thus, the West | 


Highland Breed of cattle has become suited to a humid 
climate and a country of mountains; the beautiful 
breed of North Devon, to a country of lower altitude 
and milder climate. In these, and many cases more, 
an intermixture of stranger blood might destroy the 
characters which time had imprinted on the stock, and 
produce a progeny inferior in useful properties to either 
of the parent races. Not only have individual breeders 


Viil PREFACE. 


erred in the application of this kind of crossing to 
practice in particular cases, but several entire breeds 
have been lost which ought to have been preserved. 
There are many breeds, indeed, so defective in them- 
selves, that time and capital would have been lost in 
endeavouring to cultivate them; but not a few, as will 
be seen in the sequel, might have been improved to 
the degree required, by mere selection of parents, and 
attention to the known principles of breeding. 

Not only do animals become adapted in constitution, 
temperament, and habits, to the situations in which 
they have been naturalized, but characters communi- 
cated by art become permanent by continued repro- 
duction. Thus, in the case of the Dairy Breed of 
| Ayrshire, by breeding from females that possess the 
property of yielding a large quantity of milk, a pecu- 
liar breed has been at length formed, exceedingly well 
suited to the purposes of the dairy, and at the same 
time hardy and fitted to subsist on ordinary food. 
Now, such a breed might be injured, and not im- 
proved, by crossing even with a race superior to itself 
in many properties. Thus, a cross with the Durham 
or Hereford Breeds would produce animals of larger 
size and superior fattening properties to the native 
_ Tace; but even in these properties, the progeny would 
be inferior to either the Herefords or the Durhams, 
and inferior, as a hardy race of dairy cattle, to the 


Ayrshire Breed itself. Hence, the crossing of a breed 


of cattle with a race apparently superior, will not 


PREFACE. ix 


always be attended with ultimate good; and caution 
and knowledge of the end to be arrived at are required 
even in the cases where the good seems most easily 
attained. 

Another error of a different kind, but proceeding like- 
wise from imperfect knowledge of the relative value of 
breeds, prevails to a great extent. Breeds, in themselves 
bad, are obstinately retained in districts fitted to sup- - 
port superior races. In every part of the kingdom, we 
see breeds which are unworthy of being preserved, while 
the easiest means are at the command of the farmer 
of supplying their place by others suited to the lo- 
cality. Thus, over the greater part of Wales, there are 
races of wild diminutive Sheep, which, in economical 
value, can bear no comparison with those which could be 
supplied from other places. In Kerry, and other 
mountainous districts stretching along the western 
coast of Ireland, in place of such Sheep as the coun- 
try could maintain, are to be seen assemblages of 
animals of the size of dogs, and as wild as antelopes, 
neither having wool fitted to the manufactures of the- 
country, nor being capable of fattening to any size. 
Even in the heart of Yorkshire, as we shall see in the 
- Sequel, a breed of Sheep is preserved, covering a con- 
siderable tract of country, which, from its coarseness 
of form, and inaptitude to fatten, ranks in the lowest 
class of cultivated Sheep in England; and in every 
part of the kingdom, we may see examples of the vast 
public and private loss which results from unacquaint- 


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ance with the relative value and. economical uses of the 
different breeds of our domesticated animals. 

To remove the causes of mistaken practice, in a 
branch of industry so important to the interests of 
producers and consumers, may be regarded as matter 
of national interest. From the produce of live-stock 
in this country, a large part of the subsistence of the 
people, of the materials of our manufactures, of the 
profits of the farmer, and of the revenue of the land- 
holder, is derived. In many parts of the kingdom 
tillage is difficult or impracticable, and the only valu- 
able production is live-stock ; and it is not too much 
to assert, that half the rental of the British Islands 
is derived from this source. These considerations will 
make it appear, how much the study and advancement 
of this department of rural economy merit the atten- 
tion of those who seek to widen the channels of native 
industry. | : 

Several years ago I published an account of the 
Breeds of the more important Domesticated Animals 
of this country,—the Horse, the Ox, the Sheep, the 
Goat, the Hog,—accompanied by an extensive series of 
coloured lithographic prints, being portraits of animals 
of the different races, selected from the stocks of the 
most eminent breeders in different parts of the king- 
dom. This Work, in two large Volumes, is before the 
public, and has been republished in other countries. 
It has appeared to me, that the substance of it might 
be presented to agriculturists in a different and less 

2 


PREFACE. . xi 


expensive form, and thus be adapted to more general 
use. Ihave, accordingly, re-written the description of 
the species. and varieties, adding such remarks on the 
properties of external form, and the principles and 
practice of breeding, as may supply, in part, the want 
of the original figures. I have likewise added to the 
description of the other animals, that of the Dog, both 
on account of the general interest of the subject, and 
of its particular relation to the production of varieties, 
and the effects of breeding. 


CONTENTS. | ; 


PAGE 
INTRODUCTION. 
1. Divisions OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM, : d i “xvii 
2. PROPERTIES OF EXTERNAL Form, : : 3 Ixx 
I. THE GOAT, 
SPECIES AND VARIETIES, ; ; : ; 1 
Il. THE SHEEP. 
SPECIES AND VARIETIES, 3 : : : 29 - 
W001, A : : 41 
BREEDS OF THE BRITISH ISLANDS, viz. :-— : 
1. The Breeds of the Zetland and Orkney Islands, ‘ 6S if 
2. The Soft-Woolled Sheep of Scotland, ; co. (4 
3. The Breed of the Higher Welsh Mountains, ‘ 64. ; 
4, The Soft-Woolled Sheep of Wales, : ‘ 67 2 
5. The Breed of the Wicklow Mountains, ; ‘ 71 4 
6. The Kerry Breed, . : : ; ; 75 "i 
7. The Forest Breeds of England, ‘ , ; 80 (3 
8. The Black-Faced Heath Breed, : : ; 84 \4 
9. The Cheviot Breed, : : ; : : 93 
10. The Old Norfolk Breed, ‘ £ 4 ; 114 
11, The Penistone Breed, 5 ; i ; Hees) 
12. The Old Wiltshire Breed, . : : 3 120 
13. The Dorset Breed,. . i ; , ; 122 
14. The Merino Breed, : : : : ioe ie 
15. The Ryeland Breed, ~ ; , : 155 | 3 
16. The South Down Breed, re ; : ¢ 160 ' 
17. The Old Lincoln Breed, A . : : 169 
18. The Romney Marsh Breed, ; ‘ : 174 = 
19. The Older Long-Woolled Breeds, . ; ; 180 } 
20. The Cotswold Breed, : 3 ; 186 
21. The New Leicester Breed, . : j 3 190 
i 


CONTENTS. 


Tl. THE OX. 
SPECIES AND VARIETIES, 
THE Dairy, : A 
BREEDS OF THE BRITISH Genes wa 
1. The Wild or White Forest ipobie 
. The Zetland Breed, 
. The West Highland Breed, 
. The Pembroke Breed, 
The Kerry Breed, 
The Angus Breed, : 
. The Polled Aberdeenshire Breed, 
. The Galloway Breed, 
. The Polled Suffolk Breed, 
. The Polled Irish Breed, 
. The Falkland Breed, 
. The Alderney Breed, 
. The Ayrshire Breed, 
. The Devon Breed, 
. The Sussex Breed, 
. The Glamorgan Breed, 
. The Herefordshire Breed, 
. The Long-Horned Breed, 
. The Short-Horned Breed, 


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JV. THE HOG. 
SPECIES AND VARIETIES, 
BREEDS, viz. :— 
The Siamese Breed, 
The Breeds of the Highlands ied isiends of Sagtlands 
The Old English Breeds, 
The Berkshire Breed, &c., 


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Vv. THE HORSE. 
SPECIES AND VARIETIES, : § 
CLASSES AND BREEDS OF BritisH HORSES, 
1. Tue Race-HOoRSE, 
2. THE HUNTER, ‘ P 
3, Horses For LIGHTER CARRIAGES AND THE SADDLE, 


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The Cleveland Bay, 
The Hackney, 
The Cavalry Forse, 

4, oo FoR HEAVY DRAUGHT, Viz.:— 
. The Old English Black Horse, 
: Breeds of the North-Hastern Counties, 


CONTENTS. KV 


PAGE 
3. The Clydesdale Breed, . ; : F 615 
4. The Suffolk Punch Breed, ; P i 618 


VI. THE DOG. 
SPECIES AND VARIETIES OF THE CANIDA, ; P 622 
CLASSIFICATION OF THE DOMESTICATED RACES :— 
1. THE LYCISCAN GROUP. 


Dogs of the Arctic Regions, ; : : 700 
Shepherd’s Dogs, : : ; : 706 
Great Dog of Newfoundland, . : : 711 
2, THE VERTRAGAL GROUP. 
Greyhounds, : : ‘ pas 715 
Trish Wolf-Dog, = : : : 722 
3. THE MoLossian GROUP. 5 
Mastiff, : é ‘ F : 723 
Bull-Dog, i ; — é : 728 2 
Dog of St Bernard, 5 3 ; : 732 
Old British Blood-hound, : : : 734 
4, THE INDAGATOR GROUP. 3 
1. THE TRuE Howunp, ; ‘ ; 4 736 
Stag-Hound, : , . : 739 
Fox-Hound, = ; ; F 740 
Harrier, ss A : : 741 
Beagle, : : : : ; 742 
2. THE Mure Hounp, ; : ae ; 743 
Pointer, ; : : as ; ib. 
Setter, : ; ; : : 744 
3. THE SPANIEL, . ; : ; xen ib. 
4. THE BARBET OR WATER-DOG, ; ; 746 
5, THE TERRIER, i ; : . TAZ 
ERRATUM. 


Introduction, p. lxxiii, line 15 from bottom, for scapula read sternum 


INTRODUCTION, 


+ 


I.—DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. 


Aut bodies may, with relation to their modes of existence, 
be divided into two great classes, the first comprehending 
those which consist of common matter, subject to the laws 
of chemical action ; the second comprehending the bodies in 
which matter is further subject to those other laws to which 
matter endowed with life is subject. A stone, a metal, or a 
piece of earth, is common matter, subject to known chemical 
actions. A plant or an animal is likewise matter, subject to 
changes of place, or disposition of its constituent particles, by 
chemical forces. But, while the plant or the animal lives, it 
is under the influence of other powers, and has its form, ac- 
tions, and relations, determined and controlled by a distinct 
system of laws. It is then a living body, and it is only when 
it ceases to live that it becomes wholly subject to the chemi- 
cal laws of common matter. 

Of the laws which produce the condition to which we ap- 
ply the term Life, we know nothing but from certain pheno- 
mena which the living body presents. The essential cause 18 
amongst those ultimate truths which human reason cannot 
reach. No approach has been made to solve the mystery of 
Life; and at this hour we are as ignorant of the cause of life, 
and of the agency which connects the powers of mind and — 
the mechanism of the body, as at the first dawning of human 
inquiry. 

b 


XViil INTRODUCTION. 


Of living bodies there are two great divisions, the Vege- 
table and the Animal. In the vegetable there is life, but, so 
far as we know, there is no sensation, nor power of motion 
dependent upon the will. In the animal there is sensation, 
and the power of voluntary motion. An aphorism frequently 
quoted is, that plants grow and live; that animals grow, live, 
and feel. Life, then, pervades both kingdoms ; but life, in the 
animal, performs other functions, and sensation is added to 
the powers merely vital. : 

Besides that distinction betweerfcommon matter, and mat- 
ter under the influence of the vital principle, which is founded 
on the different powers and functions of bodies, there is an- 
other distinction, obvious to the senses, founded on the dif- 
ferent structure and form of the bodies. Matter uninfluenced 
by the powers of life, presents itself in masses, or in regular 
forms termed crystalline. In living bodies, the particles con- 
stituting the organism do not arrange themselves in masses 
or crystals, but form fibres, sacs, tubes, or other parts, suited 
to particular functions. This structure is termed organiza- 
tion, and is proper to the living kingdom, vegetable and ani- 
mal. Hence the further distinction exists between the mine- 
ral and living kingdoms of nature, of Organic and Inorganic. 

Inorganic matter has its substance increased by the addi- 
tion of further particles. Organic matter is likewise increas- 
ed by the addition of further parts, but then it adds to its 
own substance by the action of its proper organs. A mineral 
is increased in volume or weight by the simple addition of 
new parts: a plant, or an animal, deriving matter from other 
substances, converts it, by the action of its organs, into the 
various tissues which constitute its own substance. Organic 
bodies, therefore, only can be said to grow. 

As the particles of living bodies are determined and con- 
trolled in their actions and relations by peculiar forces, so 
living bodies resist changes, physical and chemical, which, in 
the dead state, would take place. The influence of heat, 
moisture, or other agents, which would subvert the union of 


DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. XIX 


the particles of a body when dead, can be resisted by the 
same body when it is endowed with life. Animals, when alive, 
have the power of resisting extremes of heat, which acting 
upon the dead body would dry up and dissipate its fluid parts, 
nay, reduce it to a cinder. Many persons have subjected 
themselves to a temperature of the air far exceeding that of . 
boiling water, and yet the heat of the body itself has very — 
little exceeded that of its natural state. A few years ago 
a French mountebank exhibited, night after night, to thou- , 
sands of spectators, in London, his power of entering a heat- 
ed oven, in which he remained while a piece of flesh was 
roasted. A coal-mine in Scotland, in the valley of the Forth, 
having taken fire, burned for years, and long resisted all the 
attempts to extinguish it. Miners frequently worked in the 
vicinity of this burning mine, when the heat of the air was 
nearly equal to that of boiling water. They pursued their 
labour in this torrid atmospheres without seeming injury to 
their health, or other inconvenience than continued perspira- 
tion : and many more examples could be given of the power 
of the animal frame to resist extreme heat, while the tempe- 
rature of the blood and other fluids within the body remained 
without sensible change. 

As the vital powers of the animal enable the body to resist 
intense heat, so they enable it to resist excessive cold. At 
degrees of temperature at which all the fluids of the dead 
body would be frozen, the living body retains its natural 
temperature, and performs its wonted functions. Even in 
these latitudes of ours, there every year occur periods of 
cold, when the temperature of the external air is below that 
at which water congeals, and at which all the fluids of the 
body would freeze were they separated from it. In countries 
of the higher latitudes, the mean temperature of the year falls 
below the melting point of ice, and yet such countries are in- 
habited by numerous animals. The recent voyages of intrepid 
travellers, the Parrys, the Franklins, the Rosses, and others, 
have shewn that, at a degree of cold below that at which 


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XX INTRODUCTION, 


mercury freezes, the human beings subjected to it can take 
their wonted exercise and perform their accustomed duties. 
Nay, there are cases to shew that certain animals may have 
the great mass of their fluids frozen, and yet be preserved 
from death. Fishes have been dragged up from the circum- 
polar seas, which froze, as the nets were in the course of be- 
ing raised, into masses so hard that they might have been 
shivered to pieces by a stroke, and yet they would recover if 
thawed. A common eel has been frozen like a piece of ice, 
and been conveyed in a state of torpor thousands of miles, 
and then been restored to its state of activity by the applica- 
tion of warmth. 

But there are degrees of cold to which the frame of cer- 
tain animals in their state of activity is unsuited. Nature 
here provides a remedy by rendering them torpid in the ab- 
sence of necessary heat. ‘Thus innumerable insects are ren- 
dered insensible to the action of the external air during the 
winter season. In the case of the animals termed hyber- 
nating, sensation becomes suspended, the fluids of the body 
circulate more slowly, and respiration and all the vital ac- 
tions become less active. ‘The torpor of the creature is like 
death rather than sleep, and yet enough of vital action re- 
mains to preserve it from the external agents, which, in its 
condition of activity, would destroy it. It remains as if dead, 
but as soon as the air recovers the due warmth, the vital 
functions of the animal regain their powers, and it awakens 
from its long trance. The dormouse, the marmot, the hedge- 
hog, the bat, are with us familiar examples of animals that 
undergo this state of winter sleep, during which they are 
so dead to feeling that they may be tossed about, nay, 
sometimes have the limbs separated from the body, or the 
most vital parts exposed, without their exhibiting symptoms 
of sensation. The swallow, which migrates to us in the 
early part of summer, quits us on the approach of the colder 
season. But some, too young or too feeble for flight, remain 
behind: These betake themselves to holes in walls and the 


DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. “Xxi 


earth, to remain in their state of slumber till the return of the 

-warmer season shall call them again into life. And other mi- 
gratory birds, as the cuckoo and the corn-rail, are sometimes 
overtaken by this sleep of winter before they have been able 
to make their periodical flight, during which they may be 
tossed about without their moving a joint of the body. 

The lower tribes of animals, whose sensations are obtuse, 
present examples yet more striking than the higher tribes of 
the power of the living principle to preserve the animal organ- 
ism from the action of external agents. Many species will 
survive the most cruel torments, and revive after a long 
period of seeming death. . Certain species of vibrio have been 
so dessicated by the sun that they have become like dust, 
and, after twenty years, have been restored to life by sprink- 
ling them with a little water. 

Of the power of the living body to resist those agents 
which would otherwise act upon and decompose it, an ex- 
‘ample is furnished by a substance, the production. of the 
body itself. The gastric juice is secreted from the interior 
of the stomach, and is employed to dissolve the food which is 
received into the alimentary canal. This substance possesses 
a prodigious solvent power, yet it never acts upon the living 
organs with which it comes into contact in the body, although 
capable of dissolving all animal matters when deprived of 
life. Numerous parasitic creatures are formed to live in the 
stomachs of other animals. When alive they resist all the 
actions of the powerful solvent by which they are surrounded, 
but the moment life is extinct in them, they become subject 
to its powers, and undergo decomposition. 

Examples, too, of the property of bodies having life to 
resist those agents which would destroy them in their dead 
state, may be everywhere drawn from the vegetable king- 
dom. All the hardier forest trees resist the intensest cold 
of the climates where they are naturalized, and the vegetable 
juices remain without being frozen. Every perfect seed con- 
tains within itself an embryo plant, which only requires the 


Xxil INTRODUCTION. 


fitting influence of heat and moisture that it may become a 
living plant similar to the parent. But seeds which had been- 
buried deep in the earth for a period beyond computation, 
have been found to vegetate and grow when exposed again 
to the influence of air, heat, and moisture. Harth turned up 
from the bottom of wells and mines, has been found to give 
birth to plants whose seeds had been mixed with it, and 
which may have remained for many thousand ages beneath 
the surface of the ground. 

Death, as well as life, is a law of Nature, and life with all 
its powers is but the gift of a season. The organised fabric, 
so marvellously formed, contains within itself the germs of 
decay. The circulating fluids become more thick, the textures 
more rigid, and the vital organs less fitted to perform their 
functions. The balance is lost between the waste of the 
system and the means of supplying its parts with nutriment ; 
and thus, independently of all external injury, the time ar- 
rives when the mechanism of the body can no longer work 
with the vigour required to maintain the animal functions. 

And when life at length ceases to animate the organised 
fabric, the change that ensues in the body marks the cessa- 
tion of all those powers which had enabled it to resist the 
chemical effects of the agents with which it had been sur- 
rounded from the period of its existence. Some of its parts 
are exceedingly hard and durable, as the bones; but they 
are no otherwise distinguished, in their subjection to che- 
mical agencies, from the flesh and softer parts which are 
subject to so rapid a change. The heat which pervaded the 
animal frame, and which may be believed to have arisen from 
within by the exercise of the vital actions, is gone, the muscles 
have lost their power, and all the gifts of thought and con- 
sciousness have been seemingly taken away. 

The living kingdom, we see, comprehends two great divi- 
sions, the vegetable and the animal ; and each of these king- 
doms is divided into innumerable species and tribes of crea- 
tures, distinguished by their form, powers, functions, and - 


DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. xxii 


relations with the world which they inhabit. In both king- 
doms, we find not only an infinite diversity of organised 
structures, but a passing from simple to more complex forms. 
In the beings, the lowest in the seale of either kingdom, the 
organs are few, or imperfectly developed. As we ascend in 
the scale, further parts appear, further organs are called into 
play, and further powers are given. At the lowest point, 
the tribes of the two kingdoms seem allied, and proceed, as 
it were, from a common root, and then progressively diverge. 
In the simplest of plants, little can be discovered beyond a 
series of minute cells. As we ascend in the scale, we find 
tubes traversing this tissue, leaves unfolded, and other or- 
gans called forth. So, in the animal kingdom, we find a pro- 
gressive advance from simple to complex forms of structure. 
At the limits of the descending scale are creatures so simple 
in their organism, that they are searcely to be distinguished 
by the eye from plants; and, like plants, they are fixed to 
the spot which they inhabit. Ascending higher, we find 
creatures with more expanded powers and more developed 
organs, and so, in an ascending series, until we reach those 
in which the highest development is presented to us of the 
organs necessary for the exercise of the animal functions. 

By the term Species, naturalists designate those animals 

which are essentially alike in themselves and their progeny. 
The number of animal species is exceedingly great. Many 
thousands have been examined and arranged by the unspar- 
ing labour of naturalists ; thousands are known imperfectly ; 
and thousands must for ever escape our observation. Of the | 
individuals comprehended under these species, the numbers 
exceed our powers of conception. The air is alive with liv- 
ing creatures ; every plant has its crowds of inhabitants ; and 
all the waters of the sea and land teem with life. Numbers 
of these creatures are so minute, that some hundred thou- 
sands may exist in a drop of water. 

In order to classify these innumerable forms of life, they 
are arranged into Groups, the members of which agree in 


XXIV INTRODUCTION. 


certain characters. The most general or comprehensive of. 
these divisions are termed Kingdoms, Sub-Kingdoms, &c. 
These, again, are divided into Classes, Orders, Families, or 
Tribes; and these, again, into Genera or little Families, 
consisting of one or more Species, that is, of animals essen- 
tially alike in themselves and their progeny. The lowest 
division that can be made is into Varieties, Races, or Breeds, 
which consist of animals agreeing in the characters which 
we term specific, but differing in certain minor characters, 
assumed to be the result of known agencies, as climate, 
temperature, and food. The classifications most commonly 
received are founded upon that of the illustrious Cuvier, who 
divided the whole animal kingdom into four great groups, 
namely, 1. Radiata, or Radiated Animals; 2. Articulata, or 
Jointed Animals; 3. Mollusca, or Soft Animals; 4. Verte- 
brata, or Animals having the basis of the nervous system 
enclosed in vertebra, or hollow bones. 

The Radiata are so named from the general tendency of 
their organs to proceed like radii from a common centre. 
They may be regarded as the simplest in their forms of ani- 
mated creatures. The nervous system, which, in the higher 
order of animals, is developed in ganglia and a brain, is in 
them rudimental, visible, when it can be discovered at all, in 
a few fibres, surrounding the entrance of the alimentary 
canal. Many of them present the appearance of a simple 
digestive sac or tube, furnished with little arms or tenta- 
cula, or with mouths for fixing themselves to the substances 
on which they feed. Many of them are so small as to be 
invisible to the unassisted eye, nay, some so inconceivably 
minute, that a million of millions, it has been calculated, might 
be comprehended within the space of a cubic inch. The spe- 
cies, however, present a vast variety of size as well as of 
form, from the simplest of all, to those in which new organs 
are developed, suited to. more varied functions. They are 
all the inhabitants of water, and almost all those whose ha- 


bits:can be observed are predaceous, seizing. their prey by 


DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. XXV 


means of their numerous arms, and myriads of cilia. Many 
of them are, like plants, fixed to the spot on which they live 
and perish, as the varied species of Sponge, which are met 
with on every rocky coast from the equator to the polar seas ; 
and such are the innumerable Polypi, whose calcareous se- 
—eretions stud the ocean as with bushes and forests, and form 
new islands and continents of Coral. Many species are ge- 
latinous, and so transparent as scarcely to be distinguished 
by the eye from the element in which they live. Yet such 
creatures have a will, the faculty of motion, and the force to 
prey on other animals. Such are the. Meduse, some large, 
some microscopic, which float in myriads together, so that 
the whole ocean seems to be alive with them, giving often a 
tinge to the waves over many hundred miles, and in the 
dark emitting sparkles of phosphorescent light. The Radi- 
ata, passing through almost every conceivable form, from the 
simple digestive sac, to the sea-urchins, star-fishes, and simi- 
lar creatures, which. we may see studding the submerged 
margins of our coasts, advance, by insensible gradations, to 
the groups above them. 

The divisions above the Radiata, are alas Mollusca and Ar- 
ticulata, nearly of_an equal rank in the organic scale, but 
differing from one another in the conformation which they 
tend to assume. In the Articulata, the nervous system 
begins to be extended in length, and with this the form 
of the body. Some of them are minute transparent ani- 
malcules, invisible to the naked eye; and some of them are 
like little wheels, continually revolving, and preying upon 
the yet feebler creatures with which every drop of water 
seems filled. A little higher in the scale are the innumer- 
able parasitic creatures which suck the fluids of other ani- 
mals, living within their bodies, and frequently proving dan- 
gerous enemies even to man and the larger animals. Above . 
these are the annulose, or worm-like animals, whose skins 
are furnished with rings, giving the articulated form typical 
of the group; next are the creatures formed with numerous 


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XXVi INTRODUCTION. 


moveable segments and feet, as the Earwig and Scolopen- 
dra; next the innumerable tribes of Insects, most of which 
feed on plants, but many of which are predaceous ; next the 
Arachnida, comprehending the Spiders and Scorpions, crea- 
tures strong, voracious, and endowed with wonderful in- 
stincts, and frequently supplied with poison to destroy their 
prey, or with secretions to form nets for entangling it; and, 
lastly, are the Crustacea, as the Lobster and Crab, having a 
horny skeleton, enveloping the softer parts, and formed with 
articulations or joints, to allow of the requisite freedom of 
motion. | 

The Mollusca differ from the Articulata in not having 
jointed bodies and limbs, but a soft body, covered by a mus- 
cular integument, which assumes various forms in the differ- 
ent tribes, and in most of them gives out a calcareous secre- 
tion, which, hardening, forms a shell to serve for the pro- 
tection of the animal. They are aquatic, with the exception 
of a few tribes. They are infinitely diversified in size and 
form; but they are generally either slow-moving or fixed to 
a spot, as the Oyster, the Mussel, and other animals termed 
shell-fish. There are many of them phosphorescent, and 
emit a brilliant light. They abounded in the past ages of 
the world; and whole mountains, and immense calcareous 
strata, ave formed of their remains. The lowest in the scale 
are those which are soft, without heads, and destitute of cal- 
careous secretion without or within the body: the next are 
those which have shells, but are without heads, though fur- 
nished with mouths, and numerous eyes around the mar- 
gins of their integument: the next are those which have 
shells, and a muscular disc extended under the abdomen, and 
serving like a foot for crawling along the surface: the next 
are those which are especially adapted for swimming, and 


. are either with or without a shell: the last and highest in 


the scale are those which have feet and arms disposed around 
the head, and which are, many of them, powerful beasts 
of prey, furnished with large tentacula with which they 


_ DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. xxvii 


entangle their victims. Amongst these are the Sepiz termed 
Cuttle-fish, which have the property of emitting an inky fluid, 
either to conceal themselves from their enemies, or permit 
them to approach their own prey. 


In all the kinds of animals enumerated, no brain, pro- 5 


_perly so called, exists, the rudiments of it merely appearing 
in ganglia, or knots of nervous filaments. Now, the nervous 
system is the instrument by which the knowledge of external 
objects is conveyed to the sentient being, and by which the 
dictates of the will are transmitted to the various organs of 
the body. In proportion to its development, the animal rises 
higher in the scale of living beings, and is endowed with 
more varied powers. In the lowest tribes of all, it is merely 
developed in bundles of fibres, surrounding the alimentary 
canal; ascending higher, it forms knots or ganglia, and still 
higher, it changes its place, and expands towards the head, 
and stretches along the dorsal region. In the highest order 
of animals of all, it enlarges into a true brain, and, extending 


along the back, is inclosed in numerous bones termed vertebre. | 


The Vertebrata, or animals possessed of vertebra, are 
usually divided into four groups, which may be termed sub- 
kingdoms. 

1. Pisces. 
2. Reptilia. 
3. Aves. 
4. Mammalia. | 

All the Vertebrata have a series of bones moveable upon 
one another, and bound together, termed the Spine. Each 
vertebra has a perforation through it, so that, when the whole 
vertebre are joined together, a long continuous canal passes 
through the spinal column, At the upper or anterior termi- 
nation of the column, the vertebree change their form, become 
flat, and, being fixed together, form a rounded cavity termed 
the Cranium ; connected with which, but distinct from it, are 


the bones of the face, in which are the receptacles of the Special _ 


Senses, namely, sight, smell, hearing, and taste. The cra- 


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XXVIll INTRODUCTION. 


nium encloses the brain, the substance of which is prolonged 
through the canal of the vertebral column, forming the spinal 
chord, terminating in the lower vertebra. From the under 
part of the brain, and from the spinal chord, proceed bundles 
of nervous filaments, which, dividing, subdividing, and inter- 
mixing, communicate with every sensible part of the body. 

All the vertebrata have ribs, or hoops of bone, for protect- 
ing the lungs and other organs, with the exception of a few 
tribes in which the ribs are rudimental. Their limbs con- 
sist of two pairs, though one and sometimes both pairs are 
rudimental or wanting. The upper or anterior limbs may 
be arms and hands, as in man and the monkey tribes ; legs 
and feet, as in quadrupeds; organs for flight, as in birds; 
fins, as in fishes: the hinder or inferior limbs may be feet, 
legs, or fins, according to the uses to which they are des- 
tined. 

All the vertebrata have a muscular organ, the heart, con- 
tained within the chest, for propelling the blood through the 
system. ‘'hey have all respiratory organs, in which the 
blood, passed through innumerable capillary tubes, finer 
than the finest hair, is acted upon by the air of the surround- 
ing medium. In fishes, and certain reptiles, the respiratory 
apparatus is termed branchiz or gills, over which the water, 
containing air, passes; in all the other vertebrata, the res- 
piratory apparatus, termed lungs, consists essentially of a 
congeries of minute cells, into which the air is drawn through 
the trachea or windpipe from the mouth and nostrils. 

In all the vertebrata there ig a continued canal, which, 
commencing at the mouth, extends through the body, and 
which, enlarging within the abdomen, forms the stomach, 
consisting of one ov more cavities, in which the food is re- 
tained for a time. The food is then acted upon by various 
fluids, secreted from the interior surface of the stomach, by 
the action of which it becomes a pulpy mass, to which igs ap- 
plied the term Chyme. The chyme thus formed passes on- 
wards by the extremity of the stomach towards the remain- 


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DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAT: KINGDOM. Xx1x 


ing part of the canal, termed the intestines, which consist 
of a tube of prodigious length, convoluted and packed within 
the abdomen. The chyme, as it passes onward, mixes with 
other fiuids secreted from the liver and other organs, and is 
Separated into two portions, one of which, termed Chyle, is 
to form the matter of nutrition to the body, and the other to 
be excreted at the termination of the intestinal canal. Com- 
municating with this canal is a vast system of vessels, termed 
absorbents, which drink up, or absorb, the matter of the chyle, 
and which, gradually uniting into larger branches, carry on- 
ward the matter of the chyle, and at length uniting, pour it 
into veins which are carrying the blood to the heart, and 
thus mingle the nutrient matter of the aliment with the blood. 
The blood, carried to every part of the system in myriads of 
vessels, gives off the various matters which form the tissues 
of the body, as the matter of muscle or flesh, where that is 
required to be formed, bone, where bone is to be deposited, 
nerve, fat, and all the other matters which form the animal 
substance. | 
In all the vertebrata, the sexes exist in distinct indivi- 
duals. The female has one or more organs from which the 
ova, which contain the germ of the young, are detached after 
conception. In the greater number of tribes, fecundation 
takes place before the ovum leaves the body ; in certain rep- 

tiles, and in most fishes, impregnation takes pike after the 
exit of the ovum. 

The vertebrata, it has been seen, are divided into four 
groups; each distinguished by peculiarities of organization, 
but all.conforming to a common type. The simplest are 
Fishes, the next Reptiles, the next Birds, the last, and most 
perfectly developed in their organs, Mammalia. 

Fishes have organs suited to the liquid medium which they 
inhabit. They breathe by means of gills; and have but 
the rudiments of lungs, which are presented in the form of 
simple air-sacs. Their bones are more soft and cartilaginous 


‘than in the ordérs above them. Their limbs are short and 


RRX INTRODUCTION, 


expanded into fins, which, with the tail, are the organs of 
progression. By contracting or expanding the air-sac, they 
are enabled to alter the specific gravity of their bodies, and 
rise or sink in the liquid in which they float. Their brain is 
small; their blood is red, but cold; and the temperature of 
their bodies is little above that of the surrounding element. 
They are exceedingly voracious, preying incessantly the 
strong upon the weak. like all the other cr eatures, they 
pass progressively from the simpler to the more developed, 
until they are connected with the group above them, namely, 
the Reptiles. 

The division Reptilia comprebends creatures varyin g greatly 
in their forms, but all conforming to a common type. Some, 
like fishes, have gills in the young state, the lungs being 
only developed when they are able to quit the liquid me- 
dium in which they are born, while a few retain both gills 
and lungs through life, so that they are true Amphibia. 
This group comprehends the Batrachian reptiles,—the frogs, 
the toads, the salamanders, and others; the Chelonian rep- 
tiles, as the tortoises and turtles; the Saurian tribes, as 
the lizard and crocodile; and the Ophidean, comprehending 
the snakes and serpents of all kinds. All the reptiles are 
cold-blooded, and have a languid circulation. A few have 
wings, and in a former age of the world the winged reptiles — 
were numerous, and of huge dimensions. The serpents, 
partly aquatic, and partly living on land, are without feet, 
and those which are inhabitants of land crawl upon the 
ground, and many of them are furnished with a poison, with 
which they are enabled to inflict deadly wounds. This sub- 
stance, secreted by glands situated beneath the eyes, is con- 
veyed to large tubular teeth in the mouth, by which the 
venom is conveyed to the wound. 

Rising higher in the scale of organization are the beauti- 
ful and varied tribes of Birds. The bodies of these creatures 
are protected by light plumage: their posterior extremities 
are limbs of support when at rest, and instruments of pre- 


DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. axKi: 


hension and progression on land, and their fore-extremities, 
expanded, covered with strong feathers, and moved by pow- 
erful muscles, serve as the organs of flight. Their jaws ter- 
minate in a pointed beak; and their necks are long and flex- 
ible, so that by moving it, they may vary the centre of gra- 
vity of the body, bringing it forwards when in flight to be 
more under the wings, and backwards above the limbs of 
Support when at rest. The external air permeates the body, 
passing from the lungs even into the bones, so that the body 
may be rendered buoyant. Their respiratory action is strong, 
their blood warm, and their movements are agile and power- 
ful. Impregnation takes place within the body, and the egg, — 
when protruded, is covered by a calcareous shell; the heat 
required to hatch it being usually supplied by the body of the 
parent. In birds, the nervous system is more developed than 
in the tribes below them, and their intelligence may be be- 
lieved to be superior. In them we first find animals resign- 
ing their natural wildness, changing their form and instincts 
with the new conditions in which they are placed, and thus 
submitting themselves to true domestication. 

The Mammalia derive their distinctive name from mam- 
ma, a breast, having glands by which the female is en- 
abled to supply milk to the young. The mammalia are, most 
of them, inhabitants of land, but some of them are formed to 
live wholly in water, and some of them live partly in water, 
and partly on land. The greater number are quadrupeds, 
the members of both extremities being limbs, formed to sup- 
port the animal, and serve.the purpose of locomotion, and in 
numerous cases of prehension. The monkey tribes possess _ 
four members, having hands, but their natural motion is on 
all-fours. Man possesses but two limbs of support, and is 
formed to walk erect, his upper extremities or arms being 
left free for the various uses to which they are to be applied. 
All the mammalia bring forth their young alive, and so are 
termed viviparous. They are divided into various groups, 
which may be termed Orders. 


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XXXii INTRODUCTION. 


1. Cetacea, the Whale tribes, which, though viviparous, 
breathing by means of lungs, and suckling their young by 
mamme, are formed on a plan which fits them to live in 
water. Some are formed like fishes, as the Porpoise and 
the Dolphin, having a smooth and glossy skin without hairs, 
and connected with the skin the fatty tissue termed blubber, 
from which oil is obtained. The next in order are the true 
Whales, of which some are the hugest creatures to which 
life is given on this planet. They have no teeth, but they 
have enormous mouths, which enable them to take in, along 
with the water, shoals of worms, little shell-fish, and innu- 
merable animalcules.. It is when they rise to the surface to 
breathe that they spout forth from their nostrils the water 
which. they had swallowed with their prey, in great jets. 
They yield a vast quantity of oil, for which production they 
are pursued in the seas which they inhabit, and harpooned 
when they rise to the surface to breathe. 

2. Ruminantia, so named from the faculty possessed by 
them of returning to the mouth the food which has passed 
into the stomach, and subjecting it to a second mastication. 
All the ruminantia live on vegetable food, have the feet 
cloven, and defended at the extremities by horn. They con- 
stitute an order of creatures of the highest interest, com- 
prehending the Stag, the Antelope, the Giraffe, and others, 
amongst the wilder races; the Goat, the Sheep, the Ox, the 
Camel, amongst those which have been subjected to human 
control. Living on vegetables alone, they are never incited, 
by the appetite for food, to prey on other creatures. Some 
of them are fitted to save themselves from their enemies by 
flight, and are amongst the fleetest of quadrupeds, as the 
Elks, the Deers, the Gazelles, which delight the eye by their 
graceful motions. Some dwell on the summits, and amid 
the crags, of mountains, as the Ibex, the Chamois Antelope, 
and the Wild Sheep. Some are supplied with organs placed 
in the head, which can often be used with deadly effect for . 


protection or revenge. These arms are antlers, or horns, 
1 


DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. XXXlll 


the former being cast off and renewed every year, the latter 
enduring for the life of the animal. The Stag and other 
allied species are furnished with antlers; the Antelope, the 
Goat, the Sheep, and the Ox, with horns. The ruminating 
tribes may be said to be the most important of any other to 
the interests of the human race, some of them being endowed 
with instincts which cause them to relinquish their natural 
wildness, and submit themselves entirely to our purposes. 
The Camel is fitted beyond all other creatures to traverse the 
burning sands of the desert; the Ox, the Sheep, and the 
Goat, have been the servants of man from the earliest records 
of our race. The very species have been subjected to our 
will: they till the ground for our Support, and bear our bur- 
dens ; they yield us milk, and hair, and wool; and, finally, 
they render up their bodies for our food, and their skins for 
our covering. | 

3. Pachydermata, or thick-skinned animals, comprehend- 
ing,—(1.) The Tapir, the Wild and Ethiopian Hogs, the Pec- 
caries, and others, of which the Wild Hog is formed, beyond 
any other animal, to submit himself to: human control, and 
multiply in the state of slavery; (2.) The Hippopotamus, 
the Rhinoceros, and the Elephant, of which, in a former age 
of the world, many species abounded, whose bones alone now 
remain to attest their former existence; (3.) The Solidungu- 
la, comprehending the Horse, the Ass, the Zebra, and other 
allied species; some of which beautiful creatures remain in 
a state of liberty, and refuse to resign themselves to bond- 
age: while others—the Horse and the Ass—have been sub- 
mitted to domestication from the earliest records of human 
societies ; (4.) The Dugongs, usually classed with the Whales, 
which live in the sea, but crawl on shore to feed ; creatures 
strong, but harmless and timid, and betaking themselves, 
when alarmed, to their natural element. 

4. Edentata, or animals destitute of incisor teeth, as the 
gigantic Megatherium and Myolodon, now extinct; the family 
of Sloths, fitted to pass their lives in trees; the Armadilloes, 

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XXXIV INTRODUCTION. 


‘supplied with a natural armour ; the Ant-eaters, and two re- 


markable creatures of New Holland, the Duck-billed Water- 
Mole, and the Porcupine Ant-Eater, which connect this order 
with the Birds. 

5. Rodentia, or Gnawing animals, as the Mouse, the Rat, 
the Hare, the Squirrel, the Beaver, and the Porcupine. These 
creatures are some of them predaceous, and others live wholly 
on vegetable food. There are several of them possessed of 
wonderful instincts for constructing their dwellings, and 
many of them remain torpid during the season of cold. Some 
visit our dwellings, as the Rat and the Mouse, without sub- 
mitting themselves to our power; and the greater number 
are timid, and shun the presence of man. 

6. Marsupialia, animals of different orders, having a pouch 
underneath the abdomen, where the young receive their milk 
from glands, to which they attach themselves,—as the Opos- 


~ gum, the Kangaroo, and the Phalangers. 


7. Carnivora, or Fere, animals especially destined to feed 
on flesh, and which may be termed beasts of prey, comprehend- 
ing, (1.) the Seals and Walruseg, not less fierce and bloody in 
the ocean than the others are on the land ; (2.) the Dog tribe, 
comprehending the domesticated Dogs, the Wolves, the Jack- 
als, the Foxes, and other wild Canide ; (3.) the Urside, com- 
prehending the Bears, the Raccoons, and other allied ani- 
mals; (4.) the Civet and Weasel tribes,.as the Ichneumon, 
the Polecat, the Ferret, the Badger, the Otter ; and, lastly, 
the sanguinary family of Cats,—the Lion, the Tiger, the Leo- 
pard, the Panther, the Wild Cat, and others. 

8. Insectivora, animals that live chiefiy.on insects, and 
which are, most of them, subterranean in their habits, as the 
Hedgehog, the Shrew, the Mole. 

9. Cheiroptera, constituting the varied tribes of Bats, which 
alone, of all the mammalia, are endowed with the power of 
flight. ‘To this end their anterior limbs are expanded into 
broad membranes, and their posterior limbs are furnished 
with hands, by which they hang from trees and the roofs of 


. DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. XXXY 


caverns. Some of them live on fruits, most of them feed on 
nocturnal insects, which they pursue from twilight to dawn, 
and a few have the singular propensity of sucking the blood 
of larger animals while asleep. 2003 

10. Quadrumana, comprehending the Apes, the Monkeys, 
the Baboons, and others; creatures approaching the nearest 
to man in the form and disposition of their organs, living 
in some cases amongst rocks, but for the most part on trees, 
and forming marvellous commonwealths in the rich forests 
of the warmer countries. 

11. Bimana, having two perfect hands, and comprehend- 
ing a solitary genus, Man, classed with the Mammalia by 
the relations of form and animal attributes, but raised far 
above them all by those powers of mind which fit him to 
perform the functions for which he is destined. He alone 
is endowed with force of reason to know that the marvellous 
system of which he forms a part has been ordained by a 
Superior Power, and to believe that, when the frail fabric by 
which he is permitted to communicate with the external. 
world shall have been resolved into its elements, the con- 
sciousness will be preserved to him of his former being. 

In the Mammalia, as in the groups before them, a pro- 
gression may be traced of animal forms, not indeed in a 
merely linear series, such as the imperfection of our know- 
ledge causes us to adopt in our systems of natural classifica- 
tion, but in a certain relation, which we can trace to thé 
degree of being assured, that the Mammalia, like the groups 
before them, pass from lower to higher degrees of organic 
development. 

And when we look to the past history of the organic world, 
as it is revealed to us in the innumerable remains preserved 
in mineral depositions, we are presented with the like evi- . 
dences of a gradation of animal forms, from the simpler to 
the more composite. Nay,. there is just reason to believe 
that animal life was first introduced on our planet in its 
simpler forms. For, in the oldest fossiliferous strata, the 


1 


XXXVI INTRODUCTION, 


organic remains which we discover are always those only of 
the simpler forms, but chiefly the Mollusca, whose caleareous 
coverings have remained after the softer parts have decayed. 
At a long posterior era, we find the remains of Fishes,—the 
next in order of the animal tribes above the Mollusca ; and, 
at length, as successive periods rolled on, we find the remains 
of Reptiles, and at length of Birds and Mammalia, all con- 
forming to the more general types of animal forms, but all 
distinct as species from any now inhabiting the land or wa- 
ters of the globe: and continually, as the earth approaches 
to the present conditions of its surface, new species appear, 
until at last we discover animals identical with those now 
existing, or differing slightly from them. 

By Species we designate animals resembling one another 
in their essential characters, and possessed of the power, 
common to the vegetable and animal kingdoms, of reproduc. 


ing individuals similar to themselves and to one another. 


Now, in the past eras, as in the present, we find animals 
essentially alike, and which we infer were possessed of the 
power of reproducing the like forms. A question which 
enters into the fair range of philosophical inquiry may arise, 
whether, in the course of immense periods of time, these 
species have been so modified, in obedience to some grand 
system of natural laws, as to become suited to new conditions 
of external nature, or whether each mutation has been a new 
-act of creative power, called forth as the occasion arose, to 
produce a new race of beings? We cannot certainly resolve 
this problem by any knowledge we possess of the actual 
changes of animal species; and it is only from analogy that 
we can venture to infer, that the operation of the same laws, 
under which species have been called forth by the decrees of 
an Omnipotent Power, may have adapted species to new 
states of existence. Animals, it may be believed, must be 
suited to the conditions of external nature under which they 
are called to exist. The digestive organs must be adapted 
to the nature of the aliment from which the system of the 


DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. —-Xxxvii 


body is built up and sustained, and the respiratory organs 
to the physical and chemical constitution of the elements 
which the living creatures respire ; and when great changes. 
take place in the relations of living bodies with food, air, 
and other external agents, either we must suppose that the 
species perish utterly, or that they become adapted to the 
new conditions in which they are placed. The temperature _ 
of this earth, and, consequently, of the air and water with 
which it was in contact, must at one period have been ex- 
ceedingly great, as measured by the sensations of animals 
now living ; and with the temperature, the physical and che- 
mical relations of the solids and fluids of tlie globe must 
have varied. We cannot suppose that the pristine ocean 
contained the same earthy, saline, and other constituents, in 
the same proportions as the present seas, or that the at- 
mosphere, with respect to density and other conditions, was 
the same as now. But variations in the conditions of ex- 
ternal nature, having taken place from era to era, we 
have equal reason, at least, to believe that corresponding 
changes have taken place in the form and attributes of 
species, aS that alternate destruction and creation have been 
the law of nature. Yor what periods of time the condi- 
tions of the earth, with its waters and surrounding gases, — 
have changed so little as to have remained suited to the 
maintenance of existing species, we do not know; but the 
period must be believed to have been vastly great, when 
measured by our ordinary conceptions of duration, though 
but as a drop, perhaps, in the stream, when compared with 
the whole duration of the period since animal life was called 
forth upon our planet. The age of the gigantic mastodong, . 
the huge tapirs, and the extinct carnivora of the tertiary de- 
posites, which must have long preceded the era of man, is 
yet but as yesterday compared with the age of the great 
reptiles of the lias and oolite; and the age of these again 
must have been inconceivably posterior to the era of the 
fishes and mollusca of the first fossiliferous strata. Although, — 


XXXVIil INTRODUCTION, 


then, we cannot, with many physiologists, maintain that 
species are immutable, and exempt from the laws of change, 
to which all organic matter seems subject, we can say that 
species may remain unchanged for periods of time beyond 
any to which our inquiries, for the purposes of useful infer- 
ences, need extend. It is matter of ‘merely speculative in- 
quiry, whether now, as in all the period of the past, the 
earth, the air, and the relations which connect external 
nature with the living kingdom, are not undergoing pro- 
gressive though insensible changes, which may in the course 
of unmeasured periods of time, react upon all the existing 
species, not excepting man himself. It suifices for us to know 
that species are to us realities, and remain constant in their 
essential characters for a time which we cannot compute. 

But there is a class of changes in organic forms which fall 
more within our cognizance, and which merit our attention 
in an especial degree ;—this is the class of changes, which 
produce what we term Varieties or Races, in which the spe- 
eific type is generally so far preserved that the animals may, 
with more or less certainty, be referred -to it, although very 
often the divergence is so great that nothing can be traced 
beyond the affinities which we term generic. The human 
races, as well as the lower tribes, are subject to this class of 
‘changes, under the influence of temperature, food, habitudes, 
and other agencies. 

_ Man, it has been seen, of all the Mammalia, constitutes a 
Genus, into the circle of which none of the tribes, even the 
nearest to him in conformation, enters. Many divisions have 
been made of the different groups of men according to the 
external characters, habits, traditions, and affinities of speech, 
which have been supposed to connect them. 

One great division has been supposed to comprehend, gene- 
rally, the inhabitants of Western Asia and Europe, from the 
first historical records to the present time. This group of 
nations has been termed Caucasian, from the mountainous 
regions of the Caucasus, where the inhabitants have been 


DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. XXXIX 


supposed to present the characters most typical of the group. 
Similarities of speech, customs, and traditions, strongly indi- 
cate a common lineage of these people, and we naturally 
look to some region of Western Asia as the great centre 
whence they have been spread. Let us assume for the mo- 
ment that this region is near to the western termination of 
the great Himalaya range, termed Hindti-koh, signifying 
literally the Indian Mountain, and corresponding in part 
with the ancient Aria, and that the race spread itself south- 
ward beyond the Indus, northward to near the Arctic Circle, 
westward into Arabia, and, by the Don and Bosphorus, to the 
extremities of Europe, and again into Africa by the Isthmus 
of Suez and the Red Sea; and then we may understand the 
meaning of the term Caucasian as it has been employed by 
some, and Arian by others, to designate a great section of 
the human family. In this sense, the Arian or Caucasian 
Family comprehended the ancient Hindoos, who are supposed 
to have migrated southward beyond the Scinde ; the Assy- 
rians, Medes, and Persians, who founded early empires in 
the East; the Scythians and others, who migrated north- 
ward, and were afterwards known in Europe as Goths, Sean- 
dinavians, Sarmatians, &e.; the ancient Chaldeans, Arme- 
nians, Pheenicians, and other people, formerly inhabiting 
Asia Minor and Syria; the Arabians of Asia and Africa ; 
the Celtz, Iberi, and other early colonists of Europe, who 
are supposed to have migrated westward from the countries 
south of the Euxine; the Greeks, the Latins, and others, 
who occupied the same countries at a subsequent age. 

Amongst these people a certain relation exists, in customs as 
well as languages employed, from early times. Thus, traces 
of the Sanscrit, of which a dialect is still spoken near the 
Hind’-koh, is found in the Scandinavian and German lan- 
‘guages of Northern, and in the Celtic of Western, Hurope. 
Further, the members of this group are supposed to be dis- 
_ tinguished from all the others by certain physical and psychi- 
cal characters. Their complexion varies with the climate, — 


a INTRODUCTION, 


from the dusky colour of the Hindoo to the fine dark olive of 
the Central Asiatics, the swarthy tinge of the Greeks and 
Italians, and the florid complexions of the nations of the 
north. The face is oval, straight, and relatively small, with 
the features distinct, the nose tending to the aquiline, the 
mouth small, the teeth perpendicular. The hair is soft and 
slightly curling, black in the warmer countries, and of 
various colours in the colder, as black, flaxen, brown, red. 
The irides are generally dark when the skin is of that colour, 
but in other cases light-blue, with intervening shades. In 
this race the intellectual endowments of the species have 
been the most highly developed. With it have originated 
nearly all the sciences, and the most useful of the arts ; and | 
in literature and arms it has hitherto surpassed, and yet sur- 
passes, the other races. 

Turning to the elevated regions of Central Asia about the 
70° of longitude east, at the great Altaic chain of mountains, 
termed by the ancients Imaus, and held by them to Separate 
the Scythi of the West from the Scythi of the Kast, another 
group of races, or, aS we may rather Say, another great 
Family of mankind, presents itself, as if derived from some 

region to the east or south-east. This family is commonly 
- termed Mongolian, from the supposed name of a great country 
of Eastern Asia, comprehended within the boundaries of 
Chinese Tartary. Butthe name Mongolia, it ig believed, is of 
European origin, and applied erroneously to a great country 
of Asia; the term Mog-huls, from which the name seems to 
have been taken, being merely applicable to a certain tribe of 
Tartars. Be this as it may, the Mongolian Family, so called, 
comprehends all the Kalmuks, and other allied tribes of East- 
ern Asia. It comprehends the inhabitants of Thibet, of China 
Proper, of Japan, of Corea, of the greater part of the coun- 
tries termed Indo-China. The Mongolian Family thus in- 
cludes a great proportion. of the whole human race. It is 
characterised by the head tending to the Square form, by 
the face being broad, the nose flat, the cheek-hones promi- 


"DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. xli 


nent, the eyes oblique, and the ears large. The colour of the 
skin tends to an olive-yellow ; the eyes are dark, the hair is 


black, straight, and thin, and the beard is scanty or wanting. 


These, the most striking characteristics of this immense 
group, distinguish the Mongolians, so called, from all the 
races of the family termed Caucasian. They have in certain 
cases been conquerors, formed great empires, and arrived at 
a considerable degree of stationary civilization; but they are 
suspicious of strangers, tenacious of old usages, and have 


never arrived at distinction in science. They have formed a 


written language, eminently copious, but rude, inartificial, 
and wanting in the precision of grammatical construction. 

The term Malay, or Polynesian, has been applied to the 
inhabitants of the peninsula of Malacca, and the greater 
part of the inhabitants of Sumatra, Borneo, Java, and other 
Islands of the Eastern Archipelago, of New Zealand, and 
the Islands of the South Sea. In this race, or group of 
races, the head is somewhat narrow, the bones of the face 
are prominent, the nose is broad, the lips are thick. The 
colour of the skin varies from a tawny olive to nearly black, 
and the hair is dark and curled, but not what is termed 
woolly. These people, however, extending over a vast tract 
of ocean, and being in certain cases mixed in blood with 
other races, their characters vary so greatly, that it is impos- 
sible to reduce them to a common standard. They have the 
habits of islanders, and are, for the most part, bold, active, 
and of warm temperaments, but unforgiving, treacherous, 
and cunning. Within the limits, too, of the region of this 
group, are tribes altogether distinct in speech, customs, and 
external characters, and remaining in the savage state. 
Such are the inland tribes of some of the great islands of 
the Eastern Seas, and the black inhabitants of the insular 
continent of New Holland. 

In the great African Continent, the human race presents 
itself with characters which, like those of the other animal 
Species of the same region, may be said to be peculiar to it. 


ge 


ee ee 


nn 
Sa ee RE TE 


pe ceaeereneren PTT 


xhi -INTRODUOTION.. 


Of all the African Races, the most distinct is the true Negro, 
inhabiting a prodigious extent of country on either side of 
the equator, and fitted, by all the characters impressed upon 


his race, to inhabit the wild and burning regions which 
are proper to him. In the true Negro, the skull is narrow 
laterally, the forehead is sloping, the cheek-bones are pro- 
_ minent, the jaws elongated, the front teeth oblique, the lips 
thick, the nose is broad and flat, the ivides are dark, and 
the hair is black and what is popularly termed woolly, and 
the colour of the skin approaches to a jet-black. This race 


ee EE Sa ae SON ie. 


Seige meee M6 
= on 


has never yet exhibited great intellectual powers; although, 


under the guidance of humane instruction, the youthful Afri- 
can has proved to be not unapt to learn all that we can 
teach to Kuropeans at a tender age. ‘The temper of the 
people is eager, light, and joyous; but their actions indicate 


want of reflection. They have, in some cases, united to 
form large communities, but these have been always barbar- 
ous, and maintained by the present tyranny of the chtef. 
Although possessed of physical powers far exceeding those 
of the tribes which have settled in their country, they have 
seldom united their arms to arrest the progress of their ene- 
mies, or avenge the wrongs inflicted upon themselves. Few 
useful arts have yet penetrated their native wilderness, and 
the race seems at this hour to be little advanced beyond what 
it may be conceived to have been in the earliest times. 
_ But the African characters recede from-the grosser forms 
typical of the true Negro, until they approach nearer to the 
Caucasian type. Of this character are some of the races of 
the interior, and above all, those which extend from the 
great Sahara towards the shores of the Mediterranean, east- 
ward through the Libyan deserts to the Nile, and southward 
through Nubia to the high lands of Abyssinia, and again 
into the countries of the Caffres ; and of this character, judg- 
ing from their delineations of the human figure, were the 
ancient Egyptians ; so that the Negro form, however typical 
of the African race, becomes insensibly modified under the 


——— 


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DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. xlili 


influence of external agents. Through the Berebers, that 
is, the ancient inhabitants of Northern Africa, the Nubians, 
the Abyssinians, and others, there is a chain of connexion, 
indicated by physiological characters and ancient dialects, 
between the great African Family, and the Arabians, now 
termed Asiatic. But the Arabians are included, by almost 
all geographers and naturalists, in the Caucasian division — 
of mankind, although grave doubts may exist with respect 
to the justness of this classification. The Arabians, in- 
deed, were early mixed in blood, and connected in speech, 
with the Western Asiatics ; but if we regard locality, ancient 
dialects, habits, and shosiiied characters, the Arabians are 
more connected with the Berebers, the Nubians, and other 
Africans, than with the people of Asia or Europe. What 
contrast of form, temperament, and character, can be more 
striking than that between the pale Hollander, beside the © 


_ dikes of mud which his labours have raised up, and the 


light and dusky Arab in his tent of skin, amid the burn- 
ing sands of his wild and desolate country. Yet, if we 
assign a common lineage to the Caucasian and Arabian 
groups, we must believe that the squat and clumsy peasant 
of the marshes of the Zuyder Zee, with his brawny limbs, 
is not only of the same species, but of the same variety 
or race, as the wild wanderer of the southern deserts, with 
his swarthy skin, his coal-black hair, his keen dark eye, his 
well-braced muscles and sinewy form, properties of the body 
which, reacting, as it were, on the mind, have rendered him 
active, enthusiastic, bold, and free, enabling him to roll back 
the tide of conquest on the Northern Family, and become | 
for a time the master of the fairest portions of the globe, 
nay, to found a religious faith which has enslaved, for more 
than a thousand years, a third part of the human race. 
Turning to the great American Continent, termed New, 


_ with relation to our knowledge of it, but which we have no 


reason to believe posterior in the order of existence to 
those parts of the world which we term Old, we find innu- 


xliv INTRODUCTION. 


merable animal species, and amongst these Human Beings, 
apparently as proper to the regions where they are found as 
those of Europe, Africa, and Asia, are to the Eastern hemi- 
sphere. But America, extending over all the varieties of 


climates in which living creatures can exist, its human in- 
habitants present great diversities of form and aspect, 
though conforming to a general order of characters, which 
may be termed American. The great distinction of the in- 
habitants is between those on either side of the elevated 
countries on the Caribbean Sea. The northern races gene- 
rally resemble the Eastern Asiatics more than they resemble 
the other families of mankind. The forehead is sloping, and 
the middle part of the cranium elevated, the irides are dark, 
the face is broad across the cheeks, the mouth is wide, the 
lips are thick, the ears verylarge. The colour of the skin tends 
more or less to a copper-red, and the hair of the head is black, 
straight, and long. The southern races, again, exhibit cha- 
racters proper to their own region. If we compare the wild 
warrior of the Canadian forests with the feeble remnant of 
the misused Peruvian, the black Indian of the Caribbean 
Sea, the savage horseman of Paraguay, or the athletic hun- 
ter of Patagonia, we find differences ag great as are employed 
to distinguish the inhabitants of the Caucasus from the Kal- 
muks of Eastern Asia; but there is a relation between even 
the most distant tribes, as in the copper hue of the skin, the 
_darkness of the eye, the lanknesgs of the hair, which connects 
the American nations by a certain geheral similitude. There 
were in early times, it may be believed, partial mixtures 
with Asiatic, Polynesian, and even perhaps African colo- 
nists, yet we have no more reason to question that the 
Americans were, from the earliest distribution of animal 
Species, as proper to the regions which they inhabited, as the 
Negroes to the intertropical countries of Africa, or the Cau- 
casians, so called, to Western Asia. Most of them had not 
advanced beyond the hunter state, though there are traces 
in the country of anterior inhabitants, and though empires 


DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. - ke 


had been formed of considerable power and splendour, yet 
destined to fall an easy prey to European strangers. 

Looking at the great diversities which present themselves 
in these different races of the human family, a natural curio- 
Sity prompts us to inquire whether they are of one species ; 
and whether, on the assumption that they are of one species, 

they have sprung from the same stock, and spread over the 
earth from some common centre ; or whether they have been 
called into existence, either contemporaneously, or at diffe- 
rent epochs, according as the different parts of the earth be- 
came fitted for their reception. 

If, by species, we understand animals possessing certain 
characters in common, which we term specific, and having 
the power, which we see them to possess, of reproducing 
creatures having the same characters, there can be no diffi- 
culty in admitting that all the races of man, in so far as they 
have yet been examined, are of one species. If, indeed, we 
were to place beside a Persian of Ispahan, or a mountaineer 
of the Caucasus, a Negro of the Gambia, with his sooty skin, 
his wool-like hair, his projecting jaws ; or a Bushman of the 
Gariep, with his pigmy form, his yellow hue, his restless 
eye; or a savage of Van Dieman’s Land, with his lank hair, 
his large head, his slender limbs; we might find it hard to 
believe that creatures so unlike were identical as species. 
But, great as the differences of external form here are, we 
fail to discover any difference of conformation which can be 
regarded as essential, or which we should call specific. The 
individuals of the most dissimilar tribes breed freely with 
one another, and the progeny has nothing of a hybridal cha- 
racter, but is as fruitful as the parents from which it springs: 
and, however dissimilar the races in question may appear in 
their external characters, there is nothing like that great 
dissimilarity which we continually see in creatures admitted 
to be of the same species,—as the wild and domesticated Hog, 
and our Dogs of all sorts. | 

The other question, whether the human races have all 


xlvi INTRODUCTION. 


sprung from the loins of the same parents, or been called 
into existence in different regions contemporaneously, or at 
different epochs, though continually mixed with the question 
as to the identity of the species, is in no respect necessarily 
involved in it. Although we see far greater differences in the 
characters of animals produced by agencies which we can 
trace than in the different races of mankind, and therefore 
may reasonably believe that all men have proceeded from a 
common centre, and then have assumed, in the course of 
great periods of time, the characters which they now retain, 
yet this does not resolve the question as to which was the 
mode which the Creator, in his infinite wisdom, ordained for 
peopling the earth which he had called into existence ; whe- 
ther, by diffusing the species from one region of the earth, 
or from more than one. We are not entitled to assume 
that identical species cannot have been called into existence 
in different regions of the globe, either at the same or at 
different times. We know nothing of Creation, whatever 
fancies we may build up on our assumed knowledge. We 
may imagine that we can observe something of the first ap- 
pearance of life, as in the fungus, when it multiplies its or-_ 
ganized. cells at the rate of some millions in an hour, or in 
the globules of the chyle, which, in their passage to the heart, 
become organized beings ; but of the modes or times in which 
species first manifest themselves in any given place, we are 
as ignorant as of the laws which determine species to their 
allotted forms. "We may suppose that different parts of the 
world have produced identical species, as much as that differ- 
ent parts of the world have produced different species; and 
it were absurd to seek to limit, as it were, the Creative power 
to our narrow conceptions, by arguing that, under the same 
laws by which unlike animals have been called forth in dif- 
ferent parts of the world, the like animals cannot have been 
so. It is no solution of the problem regarding the origin of 
man, to adopt, as has been recently done, peculiar definitions 
of the term species,—as that a species consists of the like ani- 


’ DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. xlvii 


mals proceeding from the same stock, or, in other words, from 
the same individual or pair of individuals. For this is not a 
logical definition, but a proposition, which itself involves the 
very question at issue. It may be believed by every one 
that all men fall within the limits of the same specific form ; 
but it were to reason in a circle, to define species as being 
the like animals derived from a common stock, and thence to 
infer that all men are derived from a common stock, because 
they are like one another. All that we know of species, it 
has been said, is the similarity of the characters which we 
- call specific, to which we may add the possession of a power, 
which we observe in all known species, to reproduce creatures 
possessing the like characters. But there is nothing in any 
known phenomena of the organic kingdom to shew, that in 
the animal any more than in the vegetable kingdom, it is a 
law of nature, that animals which fall within the limits of 
what we regard as the same specific form, must have been 
derived from a common stock. 

We can know nothing, then, by means of the unassisted 
reason, of the production of the human species ; and if we 
are permitted to reason concerning the times and modes of 
its diffusion over the earth, we must call to our aid analogy 
and reasonable probabilities, unless we are to assume that 
the dispersion of man was itself a miracle, exempt from the 
common course of natural events. It were rash, nay, impi- 
ous, to assert that man could not be, or has not been, called 
into existence in one part of the earth’s surface, and dis- 
persed, as from a common centre, to all the parts of the 
world which he now inhabits. But treating the question as 
one on which we may lawfully employ our judgment, it is 
reasonable to inquire whether it be more consonant with. the 
known course of natural events to infer that different races 


of men—though within the limits of the same specific form,and — 


So creatures of the same kind—had been called forth in differ- 
ent regions of the earth to occupy it, or that one race only, 
and this produced in a single spot of a boundless surface, had 


"y 
‘ 


attend 


pia 


a 


ST ERE RN ANT A TT ENE TEIN pecs 


xlviii INTRODUCTION. 


been called into existence. We must remember that the 
time which chronology assigns to the period of the disper- 
sion, little more than 2000 years before the birth of our Sa- 
viour, is a period wonderfully short for such mighty changes. 
And it is hard to conceive, that, within periods of time ap- 
proaching to this, human creatures can have tran sported them- 
~ selves through desolate, and even yet almost inaccessible, re- 
gions, to the most distant islands of the remotest seas, nay, 
lived and multiplied until every trace of their ancestry had 
been lost, until every art which they had carried with them, 
even to every word of their own tongue, had been forgotten, 
and until they themselves had receded so far from the pris- 
tine type of their race, as to leave the naturalist to question 
whether they were not to be classed with an inferior tribe 
of beings. These are great difficulties, not to be removed 
by tracing the similarity of speech and customs, by which 
different sections of mankind are connected. For what does 
this similarity of speech and customs, even where it seems 
to be the most clearly established, prove? It may prove the 
relations established between tribes and nations after ages 
of strife, migrations, and admixture of races, but it cannot 
prove the'relations between pristine tribes, every trace of 
whose very existence may have been lost. Tt has been be- 
lieved, that the people we call Hindoos extended themselves 
beyond the Indus within the historica] era, but who were the 
pre-existing inhabitants whom the Hindoos, under their Brah- 
minical leaders, subdued ? There are the vestiges of anterior 
races in the country as distinct from the Hindoo as the lat- 
ter is from the Kalmuk, in aspect, Speech, customs, and tra- 
_ditionary legends ; and in several of the great Islands of the 
Eastern Seas, are insulated tribes of Savages wholly distinct 
from the other inhabitants, the manifest relicts of an anterior 
people. In Europe the Celte are known to have settled from 
a period beyond the records of any history, and yet the Celte 
were a people possessed of a religion, laws, an order of 
priests, and arts, comprehending the knowledge of metals. 
: ; 


DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. xlix 


But all over the north of Europe, the relics are found of 
people assuredly anterior to the Celtx, who used stone- 
hatchets and flint-headed arrows, inferring a condition en- 
tirely savage. Now, when we compare languages as the 
proof of a common descent amongst tribes and nations, we 
must, in order to make our argument worth anything, com- 
pare the languages of people in the first ages, all the traces’ . 
of whose speech we may suppose to have perished with the 
people themselves. When we compare the languages of a 
posterior era, after unknown periods of war, colonization, 
and the mixture of races, we may prove the connexion esta- 
blished between countries and their inhabitants, but cer- 
tainly not the pristine relation of the first people with one © 
another, or with any common stem. Thus a race of men, 
we have seen, is assumed to have extended from the ancient 
Aria, southward into the plains of India, and northward 
_ into the wilds of Scythia, the manifest traces of whose lan- 
guage, the Sanscrit, are found in the speech of the Teutons 
of the north, of the Greeks of the west, of the Indians of 
the south. This proves the relation between the members 
of this people, but not the relations between races who, for 
anything we know, may have previously inhabited the same 
countries long before written speech was known. It is no- 
thing strange that there should be analogies in the language 
of different countries, when we consider that, beyond any re- 
cords of history and tradition, tribes and nations have been 
engaged in endless migrations and strife, exterminating or 
mingling with one another ; and that within the period called 
historical, empires have been formed, embracing large sec- 
tions of the whole human family. Further, all men have | 
the like faculties and organs of speech, and it is not possible 
that there should not be analogies in the structure of lan- 
guages, even of the most distant and divergent tribes, and 
even similarity of words derived from the same natural 
sounds. But when we consider the faint similitudes which all _ 
the unsparing labour of philologists has been able to trace 
d 


INTRODUCTION. 


between the dialects of the rudest nations, whose language 
alone bears upon the question, we have less cause to wonder 
at the resemblance between them than at the radical diver- 
gence which they present, in sound, words, and construction. 
And with respect to similarities of customs, all men have, 
within certain limits, the same wants, and must, in innumer- 
able cases, be conducted to the same means of satisfying 
these wants ; and when we connect with this general cause, 
the effects of intercourse during unknown periods of time, 
we have far less cause to wonder at the resemblances, than 
at the differences, in the customs of nations. 

It will be seen, then, that great difficulties present them- 
selves to the supposition of the derivation of all the varieties of 
mankind from a common centre, at least within the period 
which chronology assigns to the existence of the human race ; 
nor are difficulties of a different kind wanting, under any hypeo- 
thesis we can form. Itis not, however, necessary, with relation 
to our present inquiry, to pursue this subject. Whether we 
suppose all men to be of the same species, derived from a com- 
mon centre, or of the same species, derived from different 
centres, we equally reason on the assumption, that great 
changes have been produced on the individuals by the infu- 
ence of the agents affecting them. If we adopt the hypothesis 
of one centre of dispersion for all the races of mankind, we 
must suppose that change of place has converted the White 
man into a Negro, and may convert the Negro into a White 
man. - If we suppose that the Primary Races of the species 
were spread from different centres, as the Negro from some 
part of intertropical Africa, the Caucasian from some country 
of Western Asia, the Mongolian from some region of the East, 
the Polynesian from one or more foci in the innumerable 
islands over which he is spread, and the American from re- 
gions proper to the great Continent to which he belongs, and 
so on; we do not, therefore, infer that these Races are not 
severally subject to the influence of. external agencies, and 
capable of undergoing great mutations, under different con- 


DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. li 


ditions of food, temperature, and habits. The N egro has all 
his grosser features softened as he recedes from the burning 
regions of swamp and jungle, where his most typical form is 
-developed ; the Kalmuk loses much of his harsher features, 
as he becomes naturalized towards the confines of Europe, and 
even assumes a new aspect, when forced to inhabit the glacial 
regions of his own continent; the Turcoman approaches 
more to the squat and sturdy form of the Mongolian Tartar 
as he extends eastward, while the Hindoo, acclimated in the 
valley of the Ganges, differs so widely from the native of the 
plains of Germany, that the aspect alone of the individuals - 
would not allow us to identify them as being of a common | 
lineage. These changes are the result of external agencies, 
and may be regarded as the adaptation of the animal form 
to new conditions. But the effect, as it may act on the or- 
ganism of the Negro, the Mongolian, the Caucasian, the 
Malay, must differ in each, and hence a great apparent mul- 
tiplication of races throughout the world may take place, 
although it may be the effect of the same agents acting on a 
few distinct primary forms. 

If, from the human species we turn to the inferior animals, 
we shall find the like evidences of the power of external 
agents to modify the animal form, and adapt it to new con- 
ditions of life. Certain animals, in the state of nature, have 
a limited habitat, and so present characters nearly uniform . 
throughout; others have a very wide range of place, in 
which case we never fail to find them more or less modified 
in their form and habits. The Common Wolf, the most 
bold and savage of the canine family, stretches over the 
greater part of the Old Continent, and is found in the N ew, 
from Behring’s Straits to near the Isthmus of Panama, 
Under these immense limits he often seems so changed that 
he can scarcely be referred to the same Specific type. The 
Bear extends from Norway along the limits of the Arctic 
Regions, and thence to the Caucasus and all eastward, 
wherever woods suited to his habitudes exist, but so changed 


ei INTRODUCTION. 


that he can scarcely be identified with the Brown Bear of 
the Norwegian Alps. In these and other cases, the changes 
produced furnish continual matter of debate to zoologists, 
whether the animals are to be regarded as distinct species, 
or as varieties of the same species. 

_ The changes produced on animals in a state of nature by 


different circumstances, as the nature of the country they 


inhabit, the means of obtaining their food, temperature, 
and altitude, are often very great; but it is when they are 
reduced to the domesticated state, that all the changes which 
they are capable of undergoing are manifested in the great- 
est degree. Sometimes, as in the case of the Dog, it would 
seem as if the influence of human reason worked a charm 
upon their nature, nay, modified the form of their bodies, as 
if to suit them for new services. Sometimes by the mere 
supply of aliment, different in kind from that which they 
procure in the natural state, or in greater quantity, the 
form of the body changes, and with this their instincts and 
habits; and further, this change in their conformation is 
capable, under certain limits, of being transmitted to their 
descendants, and, by continued reproduction, of producing a 
new breed, variety, or race. 

The Wild Hog, which extends over the greater part of the 
Old Continent, is. the undoubted progenitor of the common 
domesticated races of Europe. When this powerful and soli- 
tary creature is subjected to domestication, we shall find, in 
the sequel, that not only his form, but all his habits change. 
He may be said, in fact, to become a new species; and he 
transmits all his acquired characters to his descendants. The 
parts of his conformation regarded as the most constant in 
the discrimination, not only of species but of genera, change 
under the new relations in which he is placed. In the 
wild state, he has six incisor teeth in the upper, and six in 
the lower jaw; but, under the effect of domestication, the 
number is generally reduced to three in each jaw. The num- 
ber of his dorsal, lumbar, sacral, and caudal vertebra, vary 


DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. lin 


so much, that it may be asserted, that he differs far more 
from the Hog in the state of liberty, than many animals re- 
garded as distinct species differ from one another. 


Amongst ruminating animals, the Ox and the Sheep are 
subject to great changes of form and character, dependent | 


upon the kind and abundance of aliment. With increased — 


supplies of food, the abdominal viscera become enlarged, and 
other parts partake of corresponding modifications of form. 
To suit the increased size of the stomach and intestinal canal, 
the trunk becomes larger in all its dimensions; the respira- 
tory organs adapt themselves to the increased dimensions of 
the alimentary canal, which is indicated to the eye by a 
change in the form of the chest; the limbs become shorter 
and farther apart, and the body being nearer the ground, 


the neck becomes more short ; various muscles, from disuse,, | 


diminish in size, and the tendency to obesity increases. With ° 


_ the form of the animals, their power of active motion dimi- 
nishes, and they acquire habits adapted to their changed 
condition. These new characters they communicate to their 


progeny; and thus races differing from those which, in the 


state of nature, would exist, are produced. 


The Carnivorous animals, in like manner, when taken from 


the state of nature, and made to reproduce in a state of — 


slavery, manifest their subjection to the same laws of change. 
The size and proportion of their organs of digestion and re- 
spiration, nay, of the brain, the organ of thought, change ; 
and with these, the relative proportion of the head, limbs, 
and other parts, as we shall see in the sequel, in the case of 
the Dog, who becomes almost plastic under the habitudes to 
which we inure him. 

And if we turn from quadrupeds to the feathered tribes, 
we Shall find the like proofs of the power of food and habi- 
tudes to change the form, and with it the very instincts of 
the animals. The Domestic Goose is derived from the Wild 
of the same species, which inhabits the boundless marshes 
of northern latitudes. This noble bird visits us on the ap- 


poem cee came ete 


liv INTRODUCTION. 


proach of the arctic winter, in those remarkable troops which 
all of us have beheld cleaving the air like a wedge, often at 
a vast height, and sometimes only recognised by their shrill 
voices amongst the clouds. When the eggs of this species 
are obtained, and the young are supplied with food in unli- 
mited quantity, the result is remarkable. The intestines, 
_ and with them the abdomen, become go much enlarged, that 
the animal nearly loses the power of flight, and the powerful 
muscles that enabled him, when in the wild state, to take 
such flights, become feeble from disuse, and his long wings 
are rendered unserviceable. The beautiful bird that out- 
stripped the flight of the eagle, is now a captive without a 
chain. A child will guide him to his resting-place with a 
wand, and he is unable to raise himself by flight above the 
walls of the yard that confine him; and he gives birth to a 
race of creatures as helpless and removed from the natura] 
condition as he himself had become. 

The Wild Duck, too, affords us a similar example. This 
wary bird arrives in flocks from the vast morasses of the 
colder countries. Many pairs remain in the Swamps, pools, 
and sedgy rivers, of lower latitudes; but the greater number 
retrace their flight to the boundless regions where they 
themselves have been hatched, and where they can rear their | 
young in safety. If the eggs of this bird be taken, and the 
young be supplied with food in the manner usual in the do- 
mestic state, the animals will have changed the form, in- 
stincts, and habits of their race. Like the Goose, they loge 
the power of flight by the increased size of their abdomen, 
and the diminished power of their pectoral muscles; and 
other parts of their body are altered to suit this conforma- 
tion. All their habits change; they lose the caution and 
sense of danger which, in their native state, they possessed. 
The male no longer retires with a single female to breed, but 
) becomes polygamous, and his progeny lose the power and 
_ the will to regain the freedom of their race. The Swan, the 
noblest of all the water-fowls, becomes chained, as it were, 


DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. lv 


. to our lakes and ‘ponds, by the mere chine 2 of his natural 
form. ‘ . 

’ The common gallinaceous fowls, in the state of nature, 
live amongst trees, and, when subjugated, still retain the 
desire to roost on elevated objects. But they can now with 
difficulty ascend the perches prepared for them; their abdo- 
minal viscera having extended, their bodies have enlarged 
posteriorly, the breast has become wider, and the neck more 
short, and their wings having become insufficient to support 
the increased weight of their bodies, they have almost lost 
the power of flight ; and so changed is their entire conforma- 
tion, that sintidsiiita can but conjecture from what paren 
stock they have been derived. 

Besides the effect of increased or diminished supplies of 
food in modifying the animal form, much is to be ascribed to 
temperature, humidity, altitude, and, consequently, the rarity 
or density of the air. The effect of heat is everywhere ob- 
served, as it modifies the secretions which give colour to the 
skin, and the degree of covering provided for the protection 
of the body, whether wool or hair. In the case of the human 
species, the effects of temperature on the colour of the skin, 
and, with this, on the colour of the eyes and hair, are sufficient- 
ly known. We cannot pass from the colder parts of Europe 
to the warmer, without marking the progressive diversities of 
colour, from the light complexion of the northern nations, 
to the swarthy tinge of the Spaniards, Italians, and Greeks ; 
and when we have crossed the Mediterranean into Africa, 
the dark colour, which is proper to all the warmer regions of 
the globe, everywhere meets the eye. The Jews, naturally 
as fair as the other inhabitants of Syria, become gradually 
darker, as they have been for a longer or shorter time accli- 
mated in the warmer countries; and in the plains of the 
- Ganges, they are as dark as Hindoos. The Portuguese who 
have been naturalized in the African colonies of their nation, 
have become entirely black. If we suppose, indeed, the great 
races of mankind to have been called into existence in differ- 


lvi INTRODUCTION, 


ent regions, we must suppose that they were born with ‘the 
colour, as well as the other attributes, suited to the climates 
of the countries which they were to inhabit. It accords with 
this supposition, that the Negro remains always black, even 
in the highest latitudes to which he has been carried ; and 
that the black races of the Eastern Islands retain the colour 
proper to them in the mild temperature of Van Diemen’s 
Land. The Mongolian, even in the coldest regions of North- 
ern Asia, retains the hue distinctive of his family, but with a 
continually deepening shade as he approaches to the inter- 
tropical countries. The native of China, of a dull yellow 
tint at Pekin, is at Canton nearly as dark as a Lascar. The 


American Indian retains his distinctive copper hue amid the 

snows of Labrador ; but, on the shores of the Caribbean Sea, 

becomes nearly as black as an African. 
Temperature likewise affects the size and form of the body. 


The members of the Caucasian group towards the Arctic 
Circle are of far inferior bulk of body to the natives of tem- 
perate countries. The Central Asiatics, in elevated plains, 
are sturdy and short, the result of an expansion of the 
chest ; the Hindoos are of slender form and low physical 
powers, so that they have almost always yielded to the 
superior force of the northern nations, from the first in- 
vasion of the Macedonians, to the ultimate establishment 
of European power in the Peninsula. The Negro, on the 
other hand, in the hottest and most pestilential regions of 
the habitable earth, where the Caucasian either perishes, or 
becomes as slender as a stripling, is of a strength and sta- 
ture which would be deemed great in any class of men, 
affording a strong presumption in favour of the opinion of 
the distinctness of his race, and its special adaptation to the 
region in which it has been placed. : 

In quadrupeds, the effects of temperature are everywhere 
| observable in the coverin g provided for their body, whether 
wool or hair, and which, in the same species, is always more 
abundant in the colder than in the warmer countries. In 


DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. ~ lvii 


all quadrupeds there is a growth of down or wool under- 
neath the hair, and more or less mixed with it. In warm 
countries, this wool is little if at all developed ; but, in the 
colder, it frequently becomes the principal covering of the 
skin, forming, along with the hair, a thick fur. In the warm- 
est regions; the domestic sheep produees scarcely any wool ; 
in temperate countries he bas a fleece properly so called ; 
and in the coldest of all, his wool is mixed with long hair 
which covers it externally. The wool, an imperfect condue- 
tor of heat, preserves the natural temperature of the body, 
and thus protects the animal from cold, while the long hair 
is fitted to throw off the water which falls upon the body in 
rain or snow. But in the warm season the wool, which | 
would be incommodious, falls off, to be renewed before win- 
ter, while the hair always remains. The Dog, too, has a 
coat of wool, which he loses in countries of great heat, but 
which, in colder countries, grows so as to form, along with 
the hair, a thick fur, so that, in certain cold countries, there 
have been formed breeds of dogs to produce wool for cloth- 
ing. The dogs of Europe conveyed to warm countries fre- 
- quently lose even their hair, and become as naked as ele- 
phants, and in every country their fur is suited to the nature 
of the climate. . 
Similar to the effects of temperature is that of humidity, 
the hair becoming longer and more oily in the moister coun- 
tries. Even within the limits of our own Islands, the Ox of . 
the western coasts, exposed to the humid vapours of the At- 
lantic, has longer hair than the Ox of the eastern districts. 
Even the effect of continued exposure to winds and storms 
may modify parts of the animal form. There are certain 
breeds of gallinaceous fowls which are destitute of the rump | 
so called. Most of the common fowls of the Isle of Arran, f 
on the coast of Scotland, have this peculiarity. This little | 
island consists of high hills, on which scarcely a bush exists 
to shelter the animals which inhabit it from the continued 
gales of the Atlantic. The feathers of a long tail might in- 


lviii INTRODUCTION. 


commode the animals, and therefore, we may suppose, they 
disappear ; and were peacocks to be reared under Similar 
circumstances, it is probable that, in the course of successive 
generations, they would lose the beautiful appendage which 
they bring from their native jungles. 

The effects, likewise, of altitude are to be* numbered 
amongst those which modify the characters of animals. In 
general, the animals of mountains are smaller and more agile 
than those of the same Species inhabiting plains. In man, 
the pulse increases in frequency as he ascends into the at- 
mosphere, so that, while at the level of the sea the number 
of beats is 70 in a minute, at the height of 4000 feet the 
number exceeds 100. The air being rarer, a greater quan- 
tity of it must be drawn into the lungs to afford the oxygen 
necessary to carry off the excess of carbon in the system. 
But gradually, as man and other animals become naturalized 
in an elevated country, the digestive and respiratory organs, 
and with these the capacity of the chest and abdomen, become 
suited to their new relations. Humboldt remarks on the ex- 
traordinary development of the chest in the inhabitants of 
the Andes, producing even deformity ; and he justly observes, 
that this is a consequence of the rarity of the air which de- 
mands an extension of the lungs, 

The effects have been referred to of use or exercise in mo- 
_ difying certain parts of the animal form. The limbs of many | 
animals inured or compelled to speed become extended in 
len gth, as of the dogs employed in the chase of the swifter anj- 
mals. The limbs of an animal deprived of the means of mo- 
tion become feeble and small, as the wings of domesticated 
birds. In the natural state, the cow has a small udder, yet 
sufficient to contain the milk which her young requires; in 
the domesticated state, by milking her, the organ becomes 
enlarged, so as to contain a quantity of milk, beyond what 
the wants of her own offspring demand. Nor are the charac- 
ters thus acquired confined to the individuals on which they 
have been impressed, but may be transmitted to their pos- 


, 


DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. lix 


terity. Some of the wild horsemen of the plains of South 
America are, from infancy, continually on horseback, and 
their limbs are observed to become slender and almost unfit 
for walking, which characters reappear in the children of the 
tribe. Amongst the causes, then, which tend to form va- 
rieties, are to be numbered the habitudes of animals, whether 
in the wild or domesticated state. 

Of the means by which the animal organism becomes 
adapted to new relations we know nothing. We see that 
within the limits of the specific form, animals become suited 
to the nature and abundance of their aliment, to the condi- 
tion of the external air with respect to temperature, humi- 
dity, and density, and to the habits imposed upon them for 
obtaining their vegetable food when they are herbivorous, or | 
capturing their. prey when they feed on flesh; but how or 
why this is, we know no more than how or why animals as- 
Sume and preserve the form proper to their species. We 
may well believe that species are called forth, and their 
forms placed in the fitting relation with external nature, in 
obedience to some grand system of Natural Laws, the results 
of which we may hope in certain cases to trace, but of the 
efficient cause of which we cannot hope to obtain a know- 
ledge. But when we speak of causes in common language, 
we do not, it is well known, refer to what metaphysicians 
term eficient causes, but to the antecedents of those pheno- 
mena which we term effects ; and it is in this sense that we 
Say that the causes of the varieties of animal species are 
food, climate, habitudes, and the other agencies whose effects 
‘we have the means of observing. 

But all the causes enumerated would not of themselves be 
sufficient to form permanent varieties or breeds, were it not 
for that other law of the animal economy by which animals 
are enabled to communicate the characters acquired to their 
progeny, and by which the latter are enabled to retain those 
characters with more or less constancy. — 

That animals which, from any cause, have acquired a pecu- 


lx INTRODUCTION. 


liar conformation, may transmit the same properties of form 
to their young, and these again to their descendants, has been 
matter of observation in every age. ‘The greyhound com- 
municates to hig progeny, the flexible neck, the long back, 
the slender agile limbs, which fit him for capturing his prey 
by speed ; the blood-hound transmits his expanded nostril, 
fitted for that Surpassing sense of smell which enables him 
to follow the evanescent traces of his victim upon the ground ; 
the bull-dog transmits to his young his muscular form and. 
powerful jaws. No one ever expects to see two greyhounds 
produce an animal like a terrier ; two blood-hounds, one re- 
sembling a shepherd’s cur; two bull-dogs, any animal dif- 
ferent in essential characters from themselves. And in all 
those varieties of the other domesticated animals which we 
term breeds, the constancy of the law of transmitted proper- 
ties is alike manifested. The Merino sheep communicates to 
its young the properties which it has acquired on the moun- 
tain pastures of Spain, of producing a short unctuous wool, 
and this in localities so different as in the granitic soils of 
Sweden, the plains of Silesia, the sands of the Cape of Good 
Hope, and the myrtle forests of New Holland. The Horse 
of the Arabian deserts, wherever he is carried, communicates 
to his descendants the properties distinctive of his race. The 
great Black Horse of the meadows of Flanders transmits to 
his progeny the massive form and very colour which he has 
himself acquired ; the Race-Horse of England, the conforma- 
- tion which adapts him to rapid motion ; the Pony of Norway, 
the characters which have fitted him for a country of heaths 
and mountains: and so on in every case where animals, by 
successive reproduction with one another, have acquired the 
common properties which constitute a breed. 

In the human species, that similarity of features which is 
termed family likeness, is a familiar example of the game 
effect, not only manifesting itself in the immediate descend- 
ants, but reappearing often after several generations. The 
community of character which constitutes national resem- 


DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. xi 


blance, is matter likewise of common observation. By the 
successive reproduction between the individuals of a tribe or 
nation, a common set of characters is by degrees acquired, 
which, becoming permanent, generate a true race. This 
effect is most notable in small and insulated tribes, whose 
members intermarry only with one another. In the Ameri- 
can forests, many of the tribes of Indians can be distinguished 
from one another at a glance. In the case of the Celtic na- / 
tives of Europe, the Clans became frequently as much dis- — 
tinguished from one another by feature as by their mutual 
hatred; and the characters which they had acquired are in 
many cases retained by their descendants to the present , 
hour. In the countries of the East, where the barrier of 
castes had been established, all the distinctions of race are 
seen to be established, so that the members of different castes 
can be discriminated from one another as readily as the in- 
habitants of distant countries. 

It has been frequently observed, that what are termed ac- 
cidental variations are susceptible of being transmitted and 
rendered permanent characters. Some persons have been 
born with six fingers or toes, and this peculiarity being trans- 
mitted, has continued in the same family for generations. 
_ The case of a family in England, whose bodies were covered 
with cuticular appendages resembling the quills of porcu- 
pines, has been often cited; and a breed of sheep in America 
was procured, having short limbs resembling those of an 
otter, and therefore termed the otter breed. We cannot, 
however, term such varieties accidental. There is nothing 
_ in the phenomena of nature, to which the term accident can 
be justly applied. The characters were doubtless the result 
of some organic change proper to the animals in which they 
appeared, and their transmission to their progeny is only the 
exemplification of a law common to other cases of transmitted 
characters. 

The permanence of characters acquired by varieties is often 
wonderfully great. In the sculptured monuments of the 


lxii INTRODUCTION. 


Ligyptians, are to be found the delineation of features which 
may still be traced in the degraded Fellahs of the country. 
The Jews, after the lapse of many centuries, retain, in in- 
numerable cases, the lineaments. of their race, and although 
influenced, in the colour of the skin, by effects of temperature, 
may yet be discriminated, in countries where they have been 
naturalized, as a distinct people. The wandering tribes of 
Gipsies, which are spread over a great part of Europe, retain, 
after many centuries, the essentia] characters of their race,— 
the swarthy visage, the keen dark eye, the lank black hair. 
In India, there exist whole tribes as much distinct in aspect, 
as in speech and customs, from all around them, although 
every trace of their ancestry has been lost; and in the same 
country the Parsees, driven beyond the Indus by the Moham- 
medans, seem to be nearly the same people as when expelled 
from their Persian homes. The Laplanders, amid the Snows 
of the Arctic regions, have preserved the colour and features 
indicative of their Asiatic descent; and the Negroes, reduced 
to bondage in a distant land, have preserved from age to age 
all the essential lineaments and characters distinctive of the 
African family. 

In the case of the domesticated quadrupeds, we find simi- 
lar evidences of the wonderful permanence of characters once 
acquired and imprinted on the animals. In certain breeds of 
oxen and sheep, the animals retain from generation to gene- 
ration their distinctive marks, the presence or absence of 
horns, the length and peculiar bending of these appendages, 
and even the minutest variations of colour, as spots of white 
or black on certain parts of the body. We are made ac- 
quainted with the peculiar colour of the horses of some of the 
barbarous hordes that entered Italy when the empire fell, 
as piebald and clouded ; and the colour is yet preserved in 
some of the races of modern Italy. 

The degree of permanence of the acquired properties of 
races may be supposed to bear some ratio to the time during 
which an intermixture of blood has been continued amongst 


9 


“ 


DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. lxii 


the members of a common stock. When two animals of dis- 


similar characters breed together, the progeny partake of the - | 


properties of both parents. It. is only by continued repro- 
duction between their descendants, that a common class of 
characters is acquired, and a true variety formed; and the 
longer this successive reproduction and intermixture of blood 
are carried on, the more permanent may the transmitted 
characters be supposed to become. 

It appears, too, that the nearer animals are allied in blood, 
the more quickly is the similarity of characters distinctive of 
a breed acquired. In the practice of English breeders, it has 
not been uncommon to unite brothers with sisters, and pa- 
rents with their direct progeny, and to carry on this system 
for a long period. The physiological effect is remarkable, 
not only producing more quickly that community of charac- 
ters which constitutes a breed, but affecting the temperament 
and constitution of the animals. Under this system long 
continued, the animals manifest symptoms of degeneracy, as 
if a violence had been done to their natural instincts. They 
become, as it were, sooner old; the males lose their virile 
aspect, and become at length incapable of propagating their 


race, and the females lose the power of secreting milk in suf- | 


ficient quantity to nourish their young. These effects may 
not for a time be very observable, but, by carrying on the 
system sufficiently far, they never fail to manifest themselves. 
Dogs continually reproduced from the same litter exhibit, 
after a time, the aspect of feebleness and degeneracy. The 
hair becomes scanty, or falls off, the size diminishes, the 
limbs become slender, the eyes sunk, and all the characters 
of early age present themselves. Hogs have been made 
the subjects of similar experiments, After a few generations, 


the victims manifest the change induced in the system. They |» 
become of diminished size, the bristles are changed into hair, | 
the limbs become feeble and short, the litters diminish in| 
frequency and in the number of the young produced, the. 
mother becomes unable to nourish them, and, if the experi- | 


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lay INTRODUCTION, 


ment be carried as far as the case will allow, the feeble and 
frequently monstrous offspring will be incapable of being 
reared up, and thus the miserable race will utterly. perish. - 

In the state of liberty these effects do not manifest them- 
selves. The instincts of the animals, it may be believed, 
cause them to choose the fitting mates for propagating their 
own race. In man, the continued alliance of individuals too 
near in blood, is prevented by conscience, and by feelings 
which seem innate. In carnivorous quadrupeds, what we 
term instinct supplies the place of judgment and reflection, 
and the females make choice of certain males in preference 
to others, by which means, it is to be believed, the race is 
preserved from deterioration by unsuitable combinations. In 
the case of the social herbivorous quadrupeds, the end is at- 
tained by the males being possessed of the power and desire 
to expel the feebler members of the herd during the season 
of. sexual intercourse. The bull, with his powerful neck, 
possesses only short blunted horns, fitted, not to destroy his 
rivals by shedding their blood, but to expel them for a time 
from the herd. Thus he drives away the younger and feebler 
members, until compelled in his turn to yield to younger 
rivals. The ram is furnished with a thick forehead fitted for 
butting, by which means he is enabled to stun, without de- 
stroying, his rivals of the flock. In the deer tribes are pro- 
duced, at the season of sexual desire, those huge antlers by 
which the stronger males are enabled to terrify and subdue 
the weaker ; but these organs are temporary, and, after the 
season of rutting, fall off, to be renewed at the fitting time 
in the following year. By these and other means we are 
entitled to infer that a natural provision is made against the 
effects of unsuitable alliances of animals in the natural state. 
It is only when in the state of absolute slavery, that we are 
enabled to overcome the instinctive feelings of the animals 
subjected to our power, and to compel them to relinquish, as 
it were, their natural appetites. 

The characters which animals of the same species trans- 


DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. lxv 


mit to their descendants so as to constitute varieties, are, we 
have seen, those of the body; but the mechanism of the 
body reacts upon the mind, and faculties which we term 
mental are therefore transmissive. No one can doubt that 
instinct is due to the mechanism of the. nerves, and that 
even the higher attributes of reason are due to the develop- 
ment of the nervous system in the brain. But we can ob- 
tain, by breeding, animals with crania of different size and 
form, and consequently, with brains of different capacity and 
powers. Thus we can produce, by exercise, and by selection 
of the parents, a dog, whose cranium shall be small and flat, 
corresponding with the elongation of the muzzle, and who 
shall possess different propensities from another, whose brain 
being rounder, is larger, and who is enabled to exercise facul- 
ties for our preservation and defence, which we cannot dis- 
tinguish from reason. 

The Hog, we have seen, communicates to his posterity, 
along with his change of form, instincts and habits as diffe- 
rent from those existing in the natural state as if he had be- 
come a new species. From being a nocturnal animal, he has 
acquired a desire to seek his food during the day, and, from 
being solitary, he has become social, so that the male never, 
ina state of the utmost liberty we allow him, Separates from — 
_ his fellows of the herd. The subjugated birds convey to / 
their descendants a new set of habitudes and propensities : 
they lose the once irresistible desire to retire in Single pairs, 
and bring up the young apart, and become entirely polyga- - 
mous. The greyhound, whose nose is small, and his body 
fitted for rapid motion, conveys, with the conformation of 
his organs, the desire of capturing his prey by speed alone. 
A puppy greyhound will, the first time he Springs a covey of 
partridges, dash after them at speed; while the young pointer, 
with the great development which has been communicated to 
his nasal organ, will stand as if entranced, nay, if of-a highly 
cultivated breed, will couch upon the ground like the parents 


e 


lxvi INTRODUCTION. 


who had been disciplined to the act. The young terrier, the 
first time he sees a rabbit, will track him to his burrow ; the 
young water-spaniel will strive to seize the objects which he 
sees floating in the stream, though he has never before be- 
held a rivulet; the young bull-dog will fly at the throat of 
the first animal that assails him. The race-horse, to whom 
we have communicated the conformation which suits him for 
_ rapid motion, will manifest the fiery spirit proper to him, by 
his mother’s side, a few hours after birth. The Arabian 
horse, with his broad and high forehead, indicating a larger 
development of the brain, manifests a far superior Sagacity 
to the humbler horse of inferior lineage. Of the breeds of 
the domestic sheep, some are acclimated in countries of heaths 
and mountains, and some in the richer plains. Each has 
acquired the conformation which suits him to these condi- 
tions. If we take the mountain-lamb from its mother’s teat 
at the very birth, and bring it to the valley below, we shall 
find it still, when grown to maturity, prefer the smaller 
grasses, the wild thyme, and other plants of mountains, to 
| the richer herbage, and betake itself to the arid eminences 
of its pasture-fields in preference to the sheltered hollows, 
and communicate these desires to its offspring. Are not 
such propensities as these mental, and the result of a con- 


formation of the animal organs, and consequently transmis- 
sive from the parents to the young? Thus, habits acquired 
may assuredly be communicated from animal to animal. We 
cannot indeed suppose that a young puppy would turn a spit, 
or dance to a tune, because its parents had been taught to 
do so, but we can suppose that if a race of dogs had been 


compelled, from generation to generation, to dance and turn 
spits, they would acquire the conformation which would suit 
them to perform these offices; which would be nothing more 
than one of innumerable examples of the progressive adap- 
tation of the form of animals to the uses to which they are 
habituated. . . 

Even mutilation of the body may, in certain cases, produce 


DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. Axvii 


partial changes of conformation, which, being communicated, 
become permanent characters. If one organ is injured or 
removed, a provision is frequently made to compensate the 
loss. In some parts of Scotland it appears to have become 
a practice to scoop out the horns of young cattle, on the sup- 
position that the animals would become more quiet, and less 
apt to attack or gore one another. It would appear that the 
system of the animal tended to repair this injury by a larger 
development of the bony ridge of the forehead, from which 
the osseous nuclei of the horns proceed; and that this pro- 
cess, carried on from generation to generation, became at | 
length a character, so that a hornless breed was produced. 
There is a race of shepherds’ dogs in this country, in which 
it appears it had become a fashion to shorten the tails of 
the animals. Now, a diminution of the caudal vertebre may 
produce a modification of the sacral in contact with them, 
and thus a peculiar conformation be communicated to the 
animals, which may become permanent by successive repro- 
duction. Whether this be the origin of the peculiarity of 
the race of dogs in question, cannot be determined ; but it 
is known, that when, from any cause, dogs are born destitute 
of tails, the peculiarity may be communicated to their de- 
scendants, and become permanent.” 

Characters, then, of form, and of habits and instincts ‘ie 
results of form, may be communicated from animals to their 
progeny, and form Varieties, Races, or Breeds. We distin- 
guish a species from a variety by this, that in the species 
we regard the modification of a higher or more general type, 
namely, of a genus, tribe, or family ; in the variety, the modi- 
fication of a lower or less general type, namely, of a species. 
But the variety is likewise the modificatién of the more gene- 


* There is an authentic record, quoted by Dr James Anderson, of a cat 
which was accidentally deprived of its tail when young. The kittens of this 
animal were born without tails, which character their descendants retained as 
long as they were kept free from intermixture with other breeds; and in the 
Isle of Man, at this day, all the native cats have the tails short or rudimental. 


Ixviil INTRODUCTION. 


ral type, and there is, thus far, no distinction between the va- 
riety and the species. It may be said, indeed, that the charac- 
ters of the species are more lasting than those of the varie- 
ty: but, unless we are to assume that the forms of animals are 
immutable, this is a difference in degree and not in kind; 
and a variety, therefore, does not differ in kind from a Spe- 
cies. It may readily be supposed, then, that with respect to 
certain animals, questions may arise, whether they be species 
or varieties. But if the only real difference between a spe- 
cies and variety be, that the characters of the one are more 
lasting than those of the other, innumerable cases must pre- 
sent themselves, in which we cannot determine whether a 
given animal be what we call a species ora variety. Yet 
eager debates are continually carried on by naturalists whe- 
ther certain animals are to be regarded as species, or as 
varieties. Thus, the Common Wolf of America differs some- 
what in aspect from the Wolf of Europe, and some natu- 
ralists hold that he is specifically distinct ; but all that we 
can truly say is, that the wolf of Europe and the wolf of 
America present varieties of that form which we term Wolf, 
and our knowledge of the animal conducts us no further. 
The Domesticated Dogs present greater varieties of form 
and characters than many animals which are considered 
to be specifically different. The question has arisen whe- 
ther these dogs are of different species or of one species ? 
The resolution of the question, it is manifest, depends mainly 
upon the meaning which we assign to our own terms. If we 
are to include, under the same specific form, the long muzzle 
and slender limbs of the Greyhound, and' the short muzzle 
and stout limbs of the Bull-dog, then the Greyhound and the. 
Bull-dog are of one* species ; if we hold that the elongated 
muzzle and slender limbs of the one constitute a specific dis- 
tinction, then the Greyhound and the Bull-dog are of different 
species according to our definition. 
But a species, it has been supposed, differs from a variety 
in this, that while animals of different species will not breed 


DIVISIONS OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. —__ iI xix 


together and produce a fruitful progeny, varieties of the 
same species will breed together, and produce a fruitful pro- 
geny. We shall be able, perhaps, in the sequel, to shew the 
fallacy of this rule, as it is applied to many animals. It is 
true that observation shews that animals which diverge from 
one another beyond certain limits do not breed together, or, 
breeding together, do not produce a fruitful progeny ; but it 
is equally true, that animals may diverge from one another 
beyond the limits of forms which we call specific, and yet 
breed together. Many examples of this occur in the case of 
the gallinaceous fowls which we rear in poultry-yards, and 
of the little singing-birds brought up in cages ; and in the 


case of fishes, experiments, from the facility of fecundifying / 


the sperm, are easily made to shew that not only animals’ 


so divergent as species, so called, but as genera, may be 


made to produce a fertile progeny. The Sheep and the Goat | 


breed together, and produce a progeny as fruitful as the pa- 


rents; yet the sheep and the goat are held to be distinct ge- 


nera. ‘They are distinct genera, indeed, according to our 
classification, but it appears, from the effect, that they do 
not diverge so much from one another in those characters 
which enable animals to breed together, as to be incapable 
of producing a common race; aud so it will be seen, in the 
sequel, it is with other animals reduced.to the state of do- 
mestication. In the natural state, indeed, unions of this 
kind rarely take place, a provision having been apparently 
made against their occurrence, in the habits and instincts of 
the animals themselves. Species in the state of nature will 
very rarely intermix; and even varieties, produced by arti- 
ficial breeding, tend to preserve themselves unmixed, when 
in a state of liberty. If a flock of Merino Sheep, consisting 
of rams and ewes, be mixed together in the same field with 
a similar flock of the Heath Sheep of Scotland, there will be 
no mixture between them, the females of each selecting the 
rams of its own variety. In Wales, there are two varieties 


of Sheep, one of which inhabits the higher mountains, and a 


Ixx INTRODUCTION. ‘ 


the other a lower range; yet these sheep, though mingled in 
the commons of the country for ages, preserve themselves 
distinct; and even the female of the Dog, if left free to 
choose her mate, will almost always make the selection of 
one of her own kind, a greyhound of a greyhound, a terrier 
of a terrier, and so on. Were not some natural provision of 
this kind made, we might expect to meet innumerable hy- 
bridal animals in the state of nature ; for there can be no 
reasonable doubt that many animals which we call distinct 
species, are capable of breeding together, and producing a 
fruitful offspring. 


II.—PROPERTIES OF EXTERNAL FORM. 


The characters, in animals, of external form, may be com- 
municated, it has been seen, from the parents to the young ; 
and upon the constancy of this effect may be said to be 
founded the whole principle of what is termed Breeding, 
whether pursued to the degree of forming distinct varieties, 
or of merely communicating to individuals the peculiar cha- 
racters which we desire them to possess. If we would form 
a variety or breed, we must select the animals possessed of 
the characters sought for, and, by breeding from the progeny, 
endeavour to give permanence to the characters acquired. 
If we wish to procure individual Horses possessing the fa- 
culty of Speed, we unite in blood those which possess, in the 
requisite degree, the form and properties which we seek to 
reproduce in the progeny; if we design to procure Horseg 
having the strength fitted for labour, and the exertion of their 
powers in draught, we select the males and the females whose 
external form indicates their adaptation to the uses required ; 
if we are to propagate animals for the production of muscle 
and fat, we choose for the parents those whose conformation 
indicates the faculty of soon arriving at maturity, and readily 
assimilating nourishment. 


EXTERNAL FORM. Ixxi 


Of the domesticated animals, that whose form and proper- 
ties have excited the greatest observation and interest, is 
the Horse, whether designed for the exercise of the powers 
of speed, for the bearing of burdens and drawing of loads, or 
for any other use to which he is adapted. 
In the Horse, as in all the mammiferous animals, there is 
the long chain of distinct bores termed vertebre, which, 
bound. together by joints, cartilage, and ligaments, consti- 
-tute the vertebral or spinal column. Each vertebra has a 
perforation through it, so that, when the whole vertebree are 
connected together, there is a continued canal passing along 
the interior. Besides the perforation for forming this canal, 
each vertebra has exterior projections, two lateral, termed 
transverse processes, and one upwards, termed the spinous 
process, the latter forming that sharp elevation of bones 
which commences with the withers, and extends along the 
back. At the anterior termination of the spinal column is 
the cranium, connected with which are the jaws and other 
- bones of the face. The bones of the face consist of two divi- 
sions, the first, the lower jaw in one large piece; the second, 
the upper maxillary bones, and various other pieces united 
together. In the sockets of the bones of both jaws are in- 
serted the teeth. These consist of 6 incisor teeth in each 
jaw, that is, of 12 incisors, or, as they are called, nippers; of 
2 canine teeth or tusks in each jaw, one on each side of the 
incisors, that is, of 4 canine teeth ; and next to these, and 
at a distance from them, of 6 molar or grinding teeth on both 
sides of each jaw, that is, of 24 molar teeth in all. The dis- 
position of the teeth, the preans § of mastication, may be re- 
presented thus: 


Molar. Canine. Incisor. Canine. Molar. 
Upper jaw, A Ges 1 6 1 6 
Under jaw, ; 6 1 6 1 6 


in all 40 teeth, the canine teeth being generally wanting in 
the female. 

The cranium is composed of ten distinct pieces, namely, 
the two frontal bones which form the forehead, the temporal 


arte _pomeeenemnemreunen ements cia ee aaceemaenrenes oe 
ee Sen ae Ee ta a EER aE teen teen raat —— tn it 


ers 


huge won oa 


lxxii . INTRODUCTION, 


bones which lodge the internal organs of hearing, and others. 
It forms a cavity separated from the chambers of the nose, 
the eyes, and the mouth. Contained within it, and filling it, 
is the Brain, the substance of which passes along the whole 
vertebral column, and terminates in the upper vertebree of 
the tail, so that the Spinal cord is a prolongation of the . 
nervous matter of the brain. Proceeding from the brain and 
spinal cord, pass to the organs of the special senses, and to 
every sensible part of the body, the fine cords termed Nerves, 
made up of minute tubular filaments, each of which filaments 
is finer than the spider’s thread, and Separately invisible to 
the unassisted eye. 


Next to the cranium are the cervical vertebra, or bones of 
the neck, in number 7; next to these are the dorsal vertebree, 


or bones of the back, 18 in number ; next are the lumbar ver- 
tebree, or bones of the loins, 5 or 6 in number ; next is the ga- 
crum, so called, consisting of 5 vertebra united together, and 
forming a single piece; and last are the caudal vertebra, or 
bones of the tail, varying in number from 13-to 18. 

In the following figure, 1 is the lower jaw, 2, 3, 4, 5, are 


EXTERNAL FORM. Ixxili 


the other bones of the face, 66 the cervical vertebra, cc the 

dorsal vertebra, dd the lumbar vertebree, ee the sacral ver- 

_ tebre united int6 one piece, and f is the caudal vertebra or 
bones of the tail. | 

With the vertebral column are connected, (1.) the ribs 7¢¢ ; 
(2.) the scapula or shoulder-blade g ; (3.) the bones of the pel- 
vis p. With the shoulder-blade are connected the fore-limbs, 
consisting, (1.) of the humerus or great bone of the shoulder 
k ; (2.) the fore-arm / m, of which m is the elbow; (3.) of the 
bones of the carpus or knee »; (4.) of the cannon-bone or 
shank 0; and (5.) of the bones of the pastern and foot 6. 
With the pelvis, py, are connected the bones of the posterior 
limbs, namely, (1.) the femur or great bone of the thigh ¢ ; 
(2.) the patella or stifle-bone 7 ; (8.) the tibia or great bone 
of the leg s; (4.) the bones of the hock ¢; (5.) the cannon- 

bone w; (6.) the bones of the pastern and foot 6. 

It is from the dorsal vertebra, or bones of the back, that 
the ribs proceed, forming hoops which enclose the chest and 
a part of the abdomen. The number of dorsal vertebre, and, 
consequently, of ribs on each side, is eighteen, but sometimes 


one, or even two more are developed. The ribs are mostly . 


connected by cartilaginous bands with the scapula or breast- 
bone, of which the upper termination, h, appears in the figure. 
The breast-bone, flat and of a spongy consistence, is formed 
of several pieces united together, and is sometimes likened, 
from its form, to the keel of a ship. The chest contains the 


lungs and heart, and is separated by a muscular partition — 


from the abdomen, which contains the liver, the stomach, 
. the intestinal canal, the kidneys, and other organs. 

The shoulder-blade or scapula g, of which there is one on 
each side of the chest, is a flat triangular bone, with its nar- 
row end pointing obliquely downwards. It is attached to 
the chest by intervening muscles, and strengthened in its 
position by other powerful muscles with which it is con- 
nected. — 

Into a shallow cavity at the lower part of this bone, is in- 


i 


Ixxiv INTRODUCTION. 


serted the humerus or bone of the shoulder. The humerus 
corresponds with the bone of the same name in man, that is, 
with the portion of the human arm which is between the 
elbow and shoulder, but is so covered with muscles in the 
horse, as to seem to form a part of the trunk. It is bent 
downwards and backwards in a direction opposite to that of 
the shoulder-blade, by which disposition the parts act like a 
spring to lessen the effects of those terrible shocks which 
they sustain, when, the animal being raised from the ground, 
his weight is received upon his fore extremities. The head 
of the humerus working in a very shallow cavity in the shoul- 
der-blade, the bone has great freedom of motion. Its lower 
extremity is fitted by a hinge-like joint into the next in 
_ order of the bones of the limb, namely, the bone of the fore- 
arm. 


The bone of the fore-arm corresponds with that portion of 
the human arm which is between the elbow and the wrist, 
but the fore-arm, in the human subject, consists of two bones, 


termed respectively radius and ulna. In the horse, there 
were likewise two bones in the young state, but they became 
joined together; though the ulnar portion, as in the figure, 
is still to be distinguished projecting behind the upper part 
of the fore-arm, and receiving the name elbow in the horse 
as in man. To the elbow are attached powerful muscles, 
for extending the limb; and its size is one of the points 
looked to by jockeys, as indicative of what is termed action. 
The part termed the knee in the horse corresponds with 
the wrist of the human arm, and is for this reason termed 
carpus. It is composed of seven, and sometimes of eight, 
small bones. These bones serve for the attachment of 
muscles, and for giving flexibility to the joint. By being 
many, the weight is divided amongst them, and thus the ha- 
zard of fracture or dislocation is lessened. They are sepa- 
rated by elastic cartilage, bound firmly together by ligaments, 
and kept constantly lubricated by a secreted liquid. They 
form an exceedingly strong and perfect joint, scarcely subject 


8 


EXTERNAL FORM. lxxv 


to dislocation of parts, although, being the farthest removed 


from both extremities of the limb, they are at the part of it — 


most apt to be injured. 

The next bones form what is termed the fore-leg of the 
horse, which consists of three bones, namely, the large can- 

non-bone, or shank, with the two smaller splint-bones, as 
. they are called, behind. The splint-bones extend downwards 
for about two-third parts of the length of the principal bone, 
with which they are united by a ligamentous matter. This 
matter tends to become bone, and the ossification extending 
beyond the point of union of the bones, there is formed the 
bony tumour so common in the horse, Splint. 

The last of the series of bones of the 
limbs are those of the pastern and foot. 
The uppermost of these, the upper pas- 
tern, is jointed to the lower part of the 
cannon-bone. Inferiorly it is jointed to 


ie 2 


the lower pastern, or coronet-bone ; and 
the coronet-bone, again, is articulated 
with the coffin-bone, which is of a soft 
and spongy nature, and inclosed within. 
the horny covering of the hoof. These 
several bones of the limb are more dis- 
tinctly represented in the accompanying 
figure, where s is the lower part of the 
_shoulder-blade, 2 the humerus, work- 
ing, by its rounded head, into the socket 
of the scapula, f/ the fore-arm, e the 
- elbow, c the carpus or knee, o the can- 
non-bone, or shank, with its splint-bones 
behind /, p the upper pastern, g the 
lower pastern, or coronet-bone, 7 the 
coffin-bone, x the hoof. 
| Besides the bones enumerated, there 
are small bones, g, v, placed behind the 
others, and acting somewhat in the manner of pulleys, 


RN 


Ixxvi INTRODUCTION. 


namely, (1.) the sesamoid bones, g, behind the joint commonly 
termed the fetlock ; and, (2.) the navicular bone, », placed 
behind the common’ joint of the coronet and coffin bones. 
Over these small bones pass, from the cannon-bone, a liga- 
ment and tendons, which, being connected with the bones 
of the foot, give Surpassing elasticity combined with strength, 
to these parts. In the an- 
nexed section of the foot, L 
is the ligament, T the ten- 
dons, and N the navicular 
bone. “The hoof, by which 
the foot is covered, is of a 
substance tough and elastic 
in an eminent degree. 
Directing attention to the 
hinder part of the vertebral 
column, Fig. 1, there is the 
pelvis, p, formed by two large 
bones, one on each side of 
the spine, and firmly united to it. The upper part of each 
pelvic bone, termed the ilium, forms the haunch-bone, or 
hip-bone; and into a cavity in the lower part of the same 
bone is inserted the round head of the first of the bones of 
the posterior limbs, namely, the femur, g, or great bone of 
_ the thigh. The femur is not vertical, like the thigh-bone in 
man, but it has an oblique direction from behind forward. . 
Tt corresponds with the thigh-bone in man, but being covered, 
in the horse, with the thick muscles employed in moving it, 
it appears to be a part of the trunk. The size of this bone 
is connected, in an important degree, with the power of pro- 
gression of the animal; for, being extended backwards by 
the action of the muscles, while the foot remains fixed, it 
forces the body forward. 
In front of the lower extremity of the femur is the patella, 
or stifle-bone, 7, which corresponds with the pan of the knee 
inman. It is one of the class of bones termed Sesamoid, and 


* 


EXTERNAL FORM. lxxvil 


is designed for the attachment, and passing over, it, of ten-. 


dons of muscles. 

Jointed to the lower part of the femur is the tibia, or great 
bone of the leg, connected with which, by ligamentous mat- 
ter, is the small bone termed the fibula. These two bones 
form properly the leg of the horse; but they are, in popular 
language, termed the thigh, although they correspond, not 
with the bone of the thigh in the human species, but with the 
leg. 

Next to these bones are those of the hock, which corre- 
spond with the bones of the ankle or instep in man; and on 
one of them the tibia works by means of a hinge joint. They 
are Six in number, and one of them, corresponding with the 
great bone of the heel in man, pro- Fig. 4. 
jects backwards, and has powerful ° ; 
muscles for extending the limb in- 
serted into its extremity, so that it 
acts as a strong lever in aiding the 
forward motion of the animal ; and, 
as in the fore extremities we look to 
the size of the elbow as a point to 
be regarded, so, in the posterior 
limbs, we look to the size of the 
bone of the heel. 

The next bones below correspond 
entirely with those of the fore extre- 

_ mity. They are, (1.) the cannon- 
bone, or shank, with the two splint- 
bones attached; (2.) the pastern ; 
(3.) the coronet bone ; (4.) the cof- 
fin bone, with the sesamoid and na- 
vicular bones, as in the fore extre- 
mities. These several bones of the 
hinder limb are represented in the 
annexed figure, where p p are a part 
of one of the pelvic bones, g the femur, 7 oie stifle bone, 


ta OA SP ta PN gt 
Ps a 


Ixxvili INTRODUCTION. 


/the leg, formed of the two bones tibia and fibula, & the 
hock, whereof c is the bone of the heel, « the cannon-bone, 
with its splint bones g, f the upper pastern, d the lower pas- 
tern, e the coffin bone, ¢ the sesamoid bones, w the navicular 
bone, 2 the hoof. 

This .chain of bones being extended, performs the functions 
of a lever in moving forward the body, the foot fixed to the 
ground being the fulerum. In like manner, the other move- 
ments of the animal are performed by the flexure and exten- 
sion of the bones, thus— 


Tt is by means of the muscular forces that all the flexure 
of the bones, and movements of the other parts, are performed. 
The muscles constitute the greater part of all the solid matter 
of the body, forming the flesh of the animal, and entering 
into the composition of vessels, ducts, and sacs within the 


EXTERNAL FORM. Ixxix 


body. They are possessed of the property of contracting 
under the influence of the will, and often independently of 
it, and, by this contraction, of producing motion in the parts 
with which they are connected ; and all the movements of 
animals, from the smallest inflexion of the voice to the most 
extended motions of the limbs, are produced by the contrac- 
tile power of these organs. When they are to give motion 
to bones, the fleshy part terminates in tendons, which are 
attached like ropes or cords to the parts to be moved. The 
muscles of the horse, as of other animals, may be divided 
into classes, according to the functions which they have to 
perform, or the parts of the body to which they pertain.* 


Fig. 6. 


The muscles belonging to the head are numerous. They 


* The figure represents the principal external muscles, namely, 
a Dilatator Naris Lateralis. ‘ 
b Nasalis Longus Labii Superioris. 


ce  lLevator Labii Superioris Aleque Nasi. 


Ixxx INTRODUCTION. 


are thin on the external parts of the face and cranium, so 
that the head of the animal may be said to be nearly of the 
form indicated by the bones which compose it. 


Orbicularis Oris. 
Levator Menti. 
Zygomaticus. 
Depressor Labii Inferioris, 
Masseter. 
Orbicularis Palpebrarum. 
Levator Palpebrz Superioris. 
Attollentes et Adducentes 
} Aurem. 


Retrahentes et Abducentes 

Sterno-Maxillaris. 

Subscapulo-Hyoideus. 

Levator Humeri. 

Trapezius, 

Complexus Major. 

Splenius. 

Serratus Magnus. 

Pectoralis Magnus. 

Latissimus Dorsi. 

Obliquus Externus Abdominis (rolled up to shew the 
muscle beneath). 

Obliquus Internus Abdominis. 

Gluteus Externus. 

Gluteus Maximus. 

Adductor Tibialis. 

Biceps Abductor Femoris, 

Vastus Externus. 

Antea-Spinatus. 

Postea-Spinatus. 

Teres Minor. 

Pectoralis Parvus. 

Triceps Extensor Brachii. 

Flexor Brachii. 

Extensor Metacarpi Magnus. 

Extensor Pedis. 

Flexor Metacarpi Externus. 

Extensor Suffraginis. 


S278 gos Bo sicee oe see es, 


Lumbrici, Anterior et Posterior. 


Extensor Pedis. 

Peroneus. 

Gastrocnemius Externus. 

Plantaris. 

Flexor Pedis, 

Extensor Metacarpi Obliquus vel Parvus. 
Flexor Pedis Accessorius, 


eee 


EXTERNAL FORM. Ixxxi 


- The movements of the external ear are effected by a set of 
small muscles in contact with them on the upper part of the 
head. By their means the external ear is erected, depressed, 
or rotated, so that it may collect the sounds as they come 


from different points ; and the spirit and temper of the ani- 


mal may frequently be judged of by the movements of these 
organs. | 


Various muscles are employed in the movement of the eyes _ 


and eyelids. Some of them are within the sockets, and vary 


the position of the globe, so as to suit the relative position | 


of external objects. 

A set of muscles are connected with the movements of 
the jaws, the mouth, and the nostrils. These cover the 
maxillary bones, form the cheeks, and, stretching to a circu- 
lar muscle which surrounds the mouth, form the lips. By 
means of these muscles the jaws are moved upon one another 
with great force, the nostrils are dilated to admit the air into 
the trachea, and the varied movements of the lips are pro- 
duced. In the horse of high breeding the nostrils are dilated, 
and the muzzle is delicate. 

Another numerous class of muscles, which are internal, 
are connected with the varied movements of the tongue. 
They produce the actions connected with deglutition, and the 
inflexions of the voice. 

The bones of the neck are enveloped in a vast mass of 
muscles, subservient to the numerous motions of the head 
and neck. They stretch from the head to the chest, and their 


expansion therefore indicates power of the fore-extremities.” 


The chest and abdomen are covered with muscles, several 
of them flat, and expanded over a large surface. Some lie 
beneath the shoulder-blade, and are otherwise connected with 
it, retaining it in its place, and, aided by several muscles of 
the neck, producing those changes of position which are re- 
quired by the motions of the fore-limbs. Along the back 
extend very powerful muscles, producing the necessary flexure 
of the back ; and some pass along the inner side of the ver- 


Es 


my 
f 
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AF RE a aA me Pe Se err! REET OR. em 


i. .)) — INTRODUCTION. 


tebral column, acting upon the pelvis and thighs; and a 
set extending backwards cause the motions of the tail and 
other parts. The ribs are connected together, and moved, 
by numerous muscles passing between them; and the abdo- 
men is covered by flat tendinous muscles, which support 


the contained viscera. The diaphragm, extending within 


the trunk from the spine to the breast-bone, separates the 
cavities of the chest and abdomen. The hinder extremities, 


which are the main instruments of progression, are moved 


by muscles of prodigious force, connected with the spine, 
sacrum, and bones of the pelvis, giving motion to the thigh 
and leg. One set is employed in bending the limb under 
the body, another in extending it backwards. The muscles 
which extend downward to move the lower part of the limb, 
become tendinous as they descend, until, having reached the 
hock, they are almost wholly tendinous. By this mechanism 
the various pieces of the limb are either flexed or extended, 
without loading with muscle the parts to be pulled. 

The fore extremities are moved by a series of muscles at- 
tached to the shoulder-blade, and by others, extending from 
the higher parts of the limb downwards. These last, like 
the muscles of the hinder extremity, become tendinous down- 
wards, until, at and below the knee, they are almost wholly 
tendinous. They are distinguished into those which extend 
the humerus and other pieces of the limb forwards, and 


‘those which bend them backwards. The parts of the limb 


being extended, and at the same time bent, the limbs clear 
the ground, when the animal is propelled forwards. In 
order that they may be raised sufficiently to clear the ground, 
and move in harmony with the hinder limbs, there must be 
a peculiar adaptation of parts, and fitting strength of muscle. 
The due performance of these functions constitutes chiefly 
what is termed action in the horse, and we judge essentially 
of his safety and usefulness from the form and movements 


_of his fore-extremities. 


The horse, when we regard him in profile, is compre- 


EXTERNAL FORM. Ixxxiii 


hended, abstracting from the neck and head, within a square, 
the limbs occupying somewhat more than one-half. 


Fig. 7. 


Were the limbs to occupy too large a proportion of the 
square, the horse might be full of mettle, and possessed of 
great power of speed, but he would be wanting in the power 
of endurance necessary to suit him for useful services. A 
certain depth of chest and body is required in every horse 
from which we look for continued labour. This is essential 
in the horse of heavy draught, the hackney, the ordinary 
saddle-horse, and the hunter. <A horse having this conforma- 
tion is said to be short-legged. A length of the limbs dis- 
proportionate to the depth of chest and trunk, is only admis- 
sible in the'case of the race-horse, in which the property of 
speed is alone regarded. In an ordinary horse, the charac- 
ter of too long legs is universally regarded as a defect. Such 
a horse, whatever spirit he may possess, is easily tired, and, 
after Severe exercise, is frequently unable to take his food. 
He is subject to be purged often by a draught of cold water, 


lxxxiv INTRODUCTION, 


or a quick gallop. Such horses are familiarly said to be 
light in the carcass, to stand high in the legs, and so forth. 

A section of the chest of the horse, at its commencement 
at the breast, approaches to an oval form, and, proceeding 
from the first rib backwards, it enlarges in capacity in both 
directions. This progressive enlargement should go on to 
behind the shoulders, where the depth, and consequently the 
girth, should be relatively large. This conformation shews 
that there is due space for the action of the respiratory or- 
_gans; and, it may be said, that no horse will be found pos- 
sessed of health and endurance without a sufficient depth of 
chest. 

But an enlargement of the chest may take place by means 
of increase in width as well as in depth. When, how- 
ever, the chest approaches too much to the circular at the 
breast and shoulders, it deviates from the form adapted to 
speed and action. A cart-horse may possess a circular 
breast, and this class of horses have always more or less of 
this character ; but we desire to see the chest deep as well 
as broad. If the breast be very wide, the fore-limbs will be 
placed far asunder. But this is a disposition of parts which, 
though fitted for physical force, is not so for speed, and the 
power of active motion. Independently of the too great 
weight before the limbs, which renders the horse too heavy 
before, the further evil results, that a straddling motion is 
communicated to the animal in the gallop, which is alto- 
gether unfavourable to the exercise of this movement. The 
fore-limbs, therefore, must not be too far asunder, by the ex- 
tension of the chest in width at the breast. In other quad- 
rupeds possessed of great powers of speed, we invariably 
find that the fore-limbs are somewhat close together, as in 
the case of the greyhound as compared with the mastiff 
amongst dogs, and in the case of the deer as compared 
with the sheep amongst ruminating animals ;. but yet a 
certain lateral expansion of chest is connected with physi- 


*® EXTERNAL FORM. lxxxv 


cal strength, health, and the property of readily assimilating 
nourishment. In the case of the horse employed entirely in 
slow labour, the possession of a round wide breast is not only 
of no detriment, but it is a property to be desired. <A cer- 
tain width of breast is desirable, but in a less degree, in 
the hackney and common saddle-horse, in which the power 
of speed is held to be secondary to other properties. In 
the hunter it should exist to a medium extent, and it is 
only in the race-horse that we can afford to regard it as 
a secondary property; yet even in the race-horse, although 
too great a width of breast is to be deprecated as utterly 
unsuited to his destination, we still desire to see the chest 
expand gradually to behind the shoulders, so that its capa- 
city shall be sufficient for the action of the respiratory organs. 
The ribs, rising from the vertebre of the back, increase in 
length until the ninth, and in curvature to the last, so that 
the body gradually passes from the elliptical form, and be- 
comes nearly circular. The ribs should possess the proper 
“degree of curvature, so that the sides shall not be flat, and 
the body narrow. <A horse having the body narrow is said to 
be flat-sided, and has frequently the belly pendent, because the 
abdominal viscera have not sufficient space laterally. Such 
a horse never possesses endurance, and.rarely good action.. 
The head of the horse should be symmetrical, and rather 
small than large, a large head not conducing to any pur- 
poses of active motion, and frequently indicating sluggish~ 
ness of temper, and coarseness in other parts. Yet. the 
mere difference in the size of heads of horses of the same 
race is not a very important character, and, other points 
being good, may be disregarded. A certain breadth and 
height of forehead, however, indicates the horse of high 
breeding, and may be supposed to be connected with greater 
sagacity and spirit. | 
The ears should be free from coarseness. The spirit of 
the animal is judged of by these parts being pointed, and 


ar ie SG PS OE EE 


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NES Am 9 Oa 9 ONE DER HELORET wenn ary see 


SEES SL ISOS PRT 


iat, MR el, actin 


St eS Pitiavdsinedinn Daancebaeeaon 


Ixxxvi INTRODUCTION. . 


frequently erect. He manifests momentary irritation, or ha- 
bitual ill temper, by retracting them firmly backwards; but 
often this is done in play, or when he is tickled in the skin. 
The ears of certain horses hang habitually down, as if the 
muscles wanted power to sustain them. Such horses are 
termed “lob-eared.” They are sometimes good and endur- 
ing; but, for the most part, the character indicates a slug- 
gish temperament. 

The eyelids should be thin, and the eyes large, and some- 
what prominent, as expressive of vigour and spirit. When 
the eyes are sunk in the sockets, and the surrounding muscles 
are thick, the horse is said to be “pig-eyed.”” When the 
horse is apt to shew much of the white of the eye, his tem- 
per may be suspected; though, in some cases, the white or 
sclerotic portion is large in proportion to the coloured or 
corneous, and then its habitual appearance does not neces- 
sarily indicate badness of temper. 

The profile of the face should be nearly straight, When 
it is concave, there is often a defect of temper; when con- 
vex, the animal is usually good-tempered, and may possess 
useful properties. But yet the latter conformation is not of 
itself to be desired. A horse possessing it is familiarly said 


to be “ Roman- teccel ” Many excellent horses possess this _ 


character, which is, therefore, to be regarded as trivial, when 
the other points are good. 

The nostrils should be expansive, and not thick and nar- 
row. ‘The horse breathes through the nostrils, and the power 
of expanding these cavities is connected with his power of 
filling the lungs with air, and, consequently, with the pro- 
perty of speed. All horses having the power of rapid motion 
have expanded nostrils; and there is, perhaps, no example 
of narrow nostrils in combination with the property of rapid 
progression. The lips should be thin, and the mouth exter- 
nally of some depth, characters which render the horse gen- 
sible to the guidance of the rein; whereas thick, Short, and 


EXTERNAL FORM. lxxxvil 


coarse lips, indicate a dulness of feeling in the parts, and 
are only tolerable in the horse employed in labour. 
The muscles which cover the face should be distinctly 
marked, and not loaded with, integument and fat: The su- 
perficial bloodvessels should be distinct, and somewhat pro- 
minent. 
The windpipe should be prominent and large. The bones 
of the lower jaw should be thin, and the branches between 
which the windpipe passes should be sufficiently wide; for, 
otherwise, the horse will be incommoded when reined up, 
and will be apt, accordingly, to bore upon the hand. , 
The neck should be of medium symmetrical length. A 
too great length of neck unnecessarily loads the fore-extre-- 
‘mities, while a too short one renders the horse unapt to the 
guidance of the rein, incapable of easy flexure of the body, 
ungraceful, slow, and often unsafe. All horses possessed of 
much speed have the neck somewhat long; and, comparing 
the two kinds of conformation, it is better that the neck 
shall approach to the extreme of length than of shortness. 
The bones of the neck are covered by powerful muscles 
connected with the motions of the head and fore-arm. Pro- 
ceeding from the head, the muscles should progressively in- - 
crease in volume to the breast, where a want of muscular ex- 
pansion indicates a want of action. The upper part of the 
neck, formed of the splenius and other muscles, frequently 
termed the crest, should be sufficiently, but not excessively, 
developed. Considerable elevation of the crest.is connected 
with high and powerful action; but its excessive expansion 
has relation to vigour of the fore extremities rather than to 
speed, and hence, in the race-horse, the crest is compara- 
tively thin. But the character is not inconsistent with the 
power of rapid motion. The Flying Childers, one of the 
fleetest horses that ever was upon the English turf, had the 
crest remarkably large. é 

The neck should be somewhat arched or convex, a charac- 


Ixxxvili INTRODUCTION. 


ter depending, in part, upon the obliquity of the shoulder 
but when mere speed is regarded, the neck may be straight, 
or even concave above. The latter conformation forms what 
is termed the ‘* ewe-neck.”” It renders the horse unapt to 
the guidance of the rein, uneasy to the rider, and unsafe; 
but may exist in the class of horses in which speed alone is 
sought for. Many excellent race-horses have exhibited this 
conformation, which is that likewise of the deer and other 
swift-footed ruminants. | 

The back consists of the dorsal and lumbar vertebre, with 
the powerful muscles covering the parts. It commences 
with the elevated ridge formed by the spinous processes of 
the first dorsal vertebre, termed withers, and familiarly 
known as the part between the pommel of the saddle and the 
termination of the mane. Elevation of withers is connected 
with the vigorous movement of the fore-extremities, and is, 
consequently, indicative of action. All jockeys look to the 
height of the shoulder, which is indicated by the elevation 
of the withers, as a point connected with usefulness and 
safety in the saddle-horse ; and dealers, accordingly, usually 
seek to exaggerate the height of the horse before, by placing 
him, when he is to be examined, with his fore-feet on the 
higher ground. Great elevation of the withers, however, is 
more connected with good action than extreme Speed; and 
in the race-horse it is regarded as a secondary character. 
A great proportion of the horses distinguished on the turf 
have the withers of moderate height. In Eclipse, whose 
form has been minutely scrutinized, the withers were very 
low ; and the same conformation is observed in other Species © 
of animals fitted for great speed, But although the power 
of speed is connected with another class of properties than 
elevation of the withers, yet the latter character is never to 
be disregarded, when we look to utility and safety in the 
saddle-horse. It gives not only grace to the animal, but a 
sense of ease and security to the rider. When the withers 


EXTERNAL FORM. Ixxxix 


are low, the saddle bears upon the shoulder, and the rider 
neither feels nor possesses that security which the elevated 
shoulder gives. The horse of this form, however suited for 
direct progression, is rarely well adapted to’ quick turnings, 
and the other movements which we seek to communicate by 
education. The want of space for the attachment of the 
muscles of the neck, if compensated at all, must be so by an 
enlargement of the muscles themselves, which renders the 
shoulders thick, and what is called “ cloddy.” Cloddy shoul- 
ders, indeed, are not inconsistent with good properties in the 
saddle-horse ; but the far greater presumption is, that they 
will have the effect of rendering him heavy before, unplea- 
sant to the rider, and unsafe. They are not even absolutely 
inconsistent with great speed, though their existence is ad- 
verse to the expectation of this character. In Eclipse, the 
shoulder was cloddy in a remarkable degree, but this proves 
only that one defect may be counterbalanced by great excel- 
lencies, as was the case in this remarkable horse, whose obli- 
quity of shoulder, and vast expansion of the posterior extre- 
mities, were sufficient to produce his surpassing powers of 
progression, without our being allowed to infer that those 
powers would have been less, had the spinous processes been 
increased, and the muscular substance attached to them di- 
minished. 70 

The dorsal and lumbar vertebre, with the muscles cover- 
ing them, form the back. Debates have sometimes taken 
place regarding the proper length of this part. But the pro- 
portion of this, as of other parts of the frame, is not subject 
to any definite rule. A short back, like a short rod, is more 
strong than one of the same substance which is extended in 
length. A short back, in the horse, indicates Strength and 
capability of bearing the burden of the rider. Further, it 
indicates hardiness of constitution, the power of supporting 
fatigue, and the property of subsisting on a small quantity 
of food. When we seek, then, for a horse, as the road-horse 


Se nT ee 


xe | INTRODUCTION. 


and hackney, in which strength and endurance of long fatioue 


are regarded 'as essential properties, a short back, like short 
limbs, indicates. that the animal is suited to our purposes. 
But a horse whése back is short, is less easy in its paces, 
shorter in its step, and slower in its motions, than one which 
has a longer back; and when we regard speed, a certain 
length of back is necessary to suit the longer stride which 
rapid progression demands. The property of shortness of 
back, therefore, is disregarded in the race-horse ; but we 
may say that a medium length of back, tending to the short, 
is to be desired in horses where a reasonable degree of speed 
is to be combined with strength, that is, in all ordinary 
horses employed for the saddle, not excepting the hunter, 
and even, though in a less degree, in the horse employed in 
the lighter vehicles in harness. In a horse whose back is 
- short, the last of the ribs is brought nearer to the pelvis. 
Such a horse is said to be “ well-ribbed home,” and this 
point is looked to by jockeys, as characteristic of hardiness 
and good constitution. 

The back of the horse sometimes declines considerably 
from the withers, forming a concavity or hollow. This form 
produces easy motion of the rider, but it is not consistent 
with strength and the best position of the parts in other re- 
spects. Even when we look for a certain length of back, as 
in the horse designed for rapid motion, we should see that it 
is straight as an indication of strength. In certain cases, 
the back is convex, and not hollow. A horse thus formed is 
said to be “ roach-backed ;” but when this conformation 
exists, the horse is uneasy in all its motions, awkward in his 
paces, slow, and unapt to turn, and bend himself to the move- 
ments which we seek to communicate by training. 

The lumbar portion of the back should be broad, which is 
the result of the lateral extension of the transverse pro- 
cesses of the lumbar vertebra. This conformation indicates, 
in all cases, strength, is not inconsistent with speed, but con- 


EXTERNAL FORM. oe 


ducive to it, and therefore is to be desired in horses of every 
kind. One may see well the advantages of this form from 
the coach-box of our heavily-loaded public vehicles, where 
animals of different conformation are yoked together. While 
the narrow-loined horses will be seen to be suffering from 
the combined effects of the rapid pace and heavy load, the 
broad-loined horses will be observed performing their task 
with comparative facility. 

With the sacrum commences the part of the plese termed 
the haunch or quarter, which extends from the sacrum back- 
wards to the tail, and downwards so far as the larger muscles 
extend. The upper line of the haunch formed by the sacrum, 
and part of the caudal vertebree, is usually termed the croup. 
The croup has a natural convexity, forming a kind of arch. 
In certain horses, the croup is much elevated. But this con- 
formation is not to be desired: it is a usual accompaniment 
of the hollow back, and is less favourable to speed than if 
the parts were extended in length rather than in curvature. 
In other cases, in place of an elevation, the croup suddenly 
declines to the tail. This conformation is ungraceful, inju- 
rious to the breeding-mare by diminishing the size of the 
pelvis, and less favourable to progression than a horizontal 
extension of the part. In the highly-bred horse, the croup 
is so gently curved as to appear nearly straight; and this is 
the form which may be regarded as the most symmetrical 
and perfect. In the larger horses employed for labour, the 


croup is never so straight as in the horses of superior breed-_ 


ing ; but even in them, it is desirable to see an approach to 
the more perfect conformation. 

The main indications of the power of progression in the 
horse, as in all swift-footed quadrupeds, are afforded by the 
posterior extremities, which contain the bones, whose exten- 


sion backwards, when the foot is placed on the ground, forces — 


the animal forward. We look, therefore, as an essential 
character in horses of every kind, to the expansion in every 
direction of the haunch or quarter, understanding by these 


XCil INTRODUCTION. 


terms the bones of the pelvis and femur, together with the 
muscles which cover or are attached to them. | 

The upper or iliac portion of the pelvis, commonly termed 
the haunch-bone, projects more or less outward. To this 
part large muscles are attached, subservient to the move- 
ments of the posterior limbs. The haunch-bone should, 
therefore, be relatively large, and even an apparent coarse- 
ness of it may be tolerated. A horse in which the projection 
is So great as to appear unsymmetrical, is said to be “ ragged 
in the hips.” It is not, however, to be desired that the part 
shall be ragged, as it is called, but simply that the width of 
the haunch, measured over the iliac protuberances of the 
pelvis, shall be large, as indicating the lateral expansion of 
the haunch. 

The pelvis and femur form an angle with one another, and 
by the forcible extension of the latter backwards by the 
action of the muscles, the main spring is given by which the 
body of the animal is urged forward. Hence will appear the 
advantage of an increased length of the femur, by which the 
means are afforded of giving a large sweep or spring, when 
it is extended by the action of the muscles. Further, the 
length of the femur is indicated externally by the length of 
the haunch, measured from the haunch-bone backwards ; and 
hence it is, that length of haunch in this direction is charac- 
teristic of the power of progression of the horse. Further, 
as the movements of the posterior limbs must be performed 
by muscles of great power, we desire that the muscles of the 
haunch shall be of sufficient volume. This, too, is indicated 
to the eye by the expansion of the haunch in its different 
directions. 

In the English race-horse, the character of a large quarter 
is developed in a greater degree than in any other known 
race of horses. And not in the horse only, but in all swift- 
footed quadrupeds, the power of rapid motion has an inti- 
mate relation with the expansion of the posterior extremity. 
In the greyhound, which is the fleetest of all the races of 


- EXTERNAL FORM. | exili 


dogs, the haunch is large and high, as compared with the 


shoulder. The same character is seen in the deer and ante- 


lope tribes; and yet more in the hare, an animal whose 
swiftness far surpasses that of the horse, the greyhound, or 
the antelope, when the relative size of the animals is taken 
into account. 


Important points in the conformation of the horse are the 


form of the limbs, and their disposition with relation to the 
parts with which they are connected. 

The humerus, it has been seen, works into a shallow cavity 
in the scapula ; and, moving forward on this point as a pivot 
it describes an arc of a circle, so that the limb is raised above 
the ground. To admit of this action being performed with 
the required facility, the scapula should have considerable 
obliquity, rendering the shoulder what is termed oblique. 
Further, the humerus should be relatively short, because its 
function being to move in a circle, the same are will be de- 
scribed by a smaller radius as by a larger, and this with less 
displacement of the parts. Further, when the humerus is 
too long, the breast is placed too far in front of the fore- 
limbs, and thus the horse is rendered heavy before. 

_ The next bones of the limb, forming the bones of the fore- 
arm, should be somewhat long relatively to the cannon bone 


below, for the fore-arm being muscular, while the parts lower _ 


down are tendinous, its length increases the volume, and, 
consequently, the power of the muscles subservient to the 
movements of the limb. Further, the muscles of the fore- 
arm should be well-developed down to the carpus or knee. 
The elbow or ulnar part of the fore-arm should be long, 
so as to be adapted to its function of moving the arm, which 
it does in the manner of a lever. A good size of the elbow 
is, accordingly, regarded by jockeys as one of the points con- 
nected with action in the horse. 

The bones of the carpus or knee should be sufficiently large 
for the attachment of muscles, so that the knee shall appear 
broad when seen from the front. 


hesaineniiehdaete cael 


Sarnia aes 


sie cola crn a oe 


Xciv INTRODUCTION. 


The cannon bone must be of sufficient strength, but its 
thickness will vary with race, being greater in the breeds of 
larger horses than the more delicate and higher bred, whose 
bones are more dense than those of horses of inferior breeding. 
When viewed from the side, the limb should appear compara- 
tively broad in any kind of horses, indicating the size of the 
sesamoid bones behind, and the sufficiency of space for the 
tendons and ligaments connected with the pastern and foot. 

The pastern, formed of the upper and lower pastern bones, 
should be more oblique and long in proportion as the animal 
is destined for more rapid movements. In the race-horse 
they are peculiarly long and oblique, affording a more yield- 
ing spring to the animal when at speed. But a medium 
length and inclination only is suited to the horse in which 
strength is to be combined with ordinary powers of speed, 
as in the saddle-horse and lighter carriage-horse. When the 
parts are too short and upright, the animal becomes unsafe 
for the saddle, and unsuited for the exercise of even common 
speed; and it is only in the horse employed in slow and 
heavy labour that a short and upright pastern is an admis- 
sible character. 

The hoof should be well formed, and of symmetrical size. 
Its colour will depend upon that of the integument, but it is 
better that it be dark in colour than light. 

On the suitable conformation of the shoulder and fore- 
limbs depends the property of what is termed action, which 
consists in a ready elevation and flexure of the fore extremi- 
ties. This property is less regarded in the race-horse, in 
which it is only required to the degree that the horse shall 
have the power to clear the level surface over which his 
powers of speed are exercised ; but in all the classes of horses 
which undergo continued fatigue, and bear the burden of a 
rider, good action is an essential property. 

In the hinder limbs, which are designed essentially for 
progression, is the femur, which, for the reasons before 
given, should be relatively long. The tibia or leg proper 


ie, 


EXTERNAL FORM. XCV © 


should, for the same reasons, be long with relation to the 
part below the hock, and the muscles which cover it should 
be well developed. The patella or stifle bone should be of 
good size. The hock should be large, indicating an adequate 
extent of surface in the bones which compose it. When seen 
from the side it should appear to the eye broad, and the os 
calcis, or great‘bone of the heel, should be long, to adapt it 
to its function of a lever in extending the limb backwards. 
To the cannon bone, the pastern, and the foot, the same re- 
marks apply as to. those of the fore-extremities. , 

The aspect of horses must greatly vary with size, and the | 
conformation acquired either naturally or by artificial breed- 
ing. Whatever be the race, those characters should be cul- 
tivated in the individual which adapt them to the uses to 
which they are especially destined, whether for the course, 
the chase, the ordinary uses of the horseman, or the duties 
of heavier labour. The following figures will exhibit the | 
contrast between animals destined for different uses, yet each 
exhibiting the characters proper to its own condition. The 
one is an outline of a race-horse, Charles, XII., the other of 
a dray-horse of the old English Black Breed :— | 


LBikeraren 


INTRODUCTION. 


In the case of the Horse, we have considered the proper- 


ties of external form, which we seek to communicate to an 
animal whose physical powers we call forth for particular 
ends. But other kinds of animals are destined for other 
uses, and each has a conformation proper to itself, and in 
them we endeavour to produce a class of characters depen- 
dent upon their own nature and our purposes in rearing 
them. Amongst these animals, the Ox, the Sheep, the Goat, 
and the Hog, are domesticated chiefly for the purpose of pro- 
ducing human food and clothing, but, above all, for the pro- 
duction of food, either the flesh of the animals themselves, 
or the milk of the females, produced for the nourishment of 
their young. The characters indicative of the faculties best 
suited for these different purposes differ in the different 
Species. But there are certain characters common to all of 
them, which indicate in a greater or less degree their adap- 
tation to the production of flesh or muscle, which, along with 
the fatty secretion, constitutes food. 

The muscular tissue or flesh consists of a series of fine 
tubular fibres or threads. These fibres united form fasciculi, 


EXTERNAL FORM. XCV1l 


or bundles of fibres, which, again, being united, form larger 
fasciculi. These fibres and fasciculi are separated by a fine 
intervening tissue of cells, in which is secreted the oily sub- 
stance, fat. This latter substance is intermingled with the 
muscular or fleshy tissue, and is found in large quantity be- 
neath the skin and in the muscular tissue connected with it, 
and surrounds, or is intermingled with, the various viscera 
within the body, as the intestines, the heart, the kidneys, and 
other organs. It affords nourishment to the system, is ex- 
hausted when the animal is deprived of food, and increases 
largely in quantity when abundant sustenance is supplied. 
The muscular tissue or flesh grows with the animal, and 
is essential to its existence and power of motion. When it 
arrives at its full growth, little further addition can be made 
to it by means of food. But it is otherwise with the fatty 
matter which surrounds and is intermingled with its sub- 
stance. When the food which the animal assimilates by the ° 
action of its organs is no longer needed to form muscle and 
bone, it produces fat; the muscles become enlarged, and the 
integuments extended, and the accumulation of fat takes place 
in great quantity within the trunk. By merely feeding an ani- 
mal, we may not have the power of increasing its muscular 
substance, but we have a oreat power over the increase of the 
fatty matter, which, along with the fleshy fibre, forms food. 
Now, a certain set of characters indicates in all the ani- 
mals enumerated the property of arriving speedily at ma- 
turity of bone and muscle, and of readily secreting fat. As 
the property of quickly assimilating nourishment depends on 
the action of the digestive and respiratory organs, so it has 
been inferred that a large chest for containing the organs of 
respiration, and a capacious trunk for containing the stomach 


‘and other viscera employed in digestion, are connected with 


the property of easy digestion and assimilation. But what- 

ever be the causes assigned, experience shews that, in every 

case of a healthy animal, the property of fattening quickly 

is combined with a capacious body. Further, as an indica- 

tion of the property of secreting fat, we find an absence of 
f 


Keviil INTRODUCTION. 


‘ thickness or coarseness, as it is termed, of the bones of the 

extremities, as of the head, limbs, and caudal vertebre or 
tail. <A thick and large head, massy limbs below the hock 

_ and knee, and a thick tail, may indicate strength and large 
_ muscles; but they do not manifest that peculiar delicacy of 
| form which experience shews to exist in an animal that can 

| be fattened with facility. 

Besides those indications of a tendency to fatten readily, 
which are exhibited by the conformation of the animal, there is 
one of essential importance indicated by the touch. The skin 
is found to be soft, and, as it were, expansive. This property 
differs from mere thinness of the integuments, which, as in- 
dicative of want of hardiness, would be regarded as a defect. 

It is a softness combined with elasticity, conveying the idea 
of a fine membrane spread over a soft cushion. The differ- 
ence between the mellow feel, as it has been termed, of an _ 
animal which fattens readily, and the hard inexpansive skin 
of an animal which does not possess this property, is readily 
discriminated. 

These characters,—the broad chest and expanded trunk, 
| the fineness of the bones of the extremities, and the soft ex- 
) pansive integuments,—have been found indications of the 
| property of secreting the fatty tissue in all the animals which 

we domesticate. They extend to the horse, the rabbit, the 

domesticated fowls, and even to the dog, nay, it is believed, 
to the human species. In the most numerous kennel of 
hounds, we should have little difficulty in pointing out, by 

_means of the wide chests, the round bodies, and soft skins, 

all the individuals which became the most quickly fattened 

by the food consumed by them. 

The Horse may, for the uses for which we design him, be 
too much loaded with muscle and fat. . This can never be to 
the degree of being defects in the animals which we rear for 
the production of these substances. The greater the volume 
of muscular and fatty substance which such an animal bears, 
and the larger the space which his body occupies in proportion. 
to his limbs, the more adapted is his form to the uses to which 


EXTERNAL FORM. XC1X 


he is to be applied. In all cases, then, of animals to be fat- 
tened, we desire that the trunk shall be large in proportion 


to the limbs, or, in other words, that the limbs shall be short ~ 


in proportion to the trunk. 


In the Horse, we cultivate the characters of form which in- | 


dicate the power of active movements of the body. In ani- 
mals which we design to rear up to the earliest possible ma- 


turity of muscle and fatness, we desire no other power of 


active motion than consists with the means of procuring their 
own food; and when the state in which we keep them is per- 
fectly artificial, so that food is supplied to them in unlimited 
quantity, we cultivate characters ephipely the opposite of 
those which indicate activity. 

Of the animals reared in this manner for human food, the 
Ox is one whose form has, in this country, been brought'to 
great perfection with relation to his power of arriving at 
early maturity, and becoming soon fat. 


The Ox differs essentially from the Horse in his internal 


conformation and exterior form. Being of the class of Ru- 
minants, his body is largely extended in the abdominal re- 
gion, and the form and capacity of his chest are modified in 
a corresponding degree. While the Horse stands within a 
square, of which his body occupies about one-half, the Ox 
stands within a rectangle, of which his body occupies a larger 
proportion than the half, as in the following figure, which is 
the outline of a Galloway Heifer. 


ang Oe pe yee 


SS Ss 


INTRODUCTION. 


The teeth of the ox consist only of two kinds, namely, the 
sharp-edged, or incisors, which perform the office of cutting 


the substances presented to them, in the manner of shears 
or chisels, and the molar teeth, which are situated farther 
back in the jaw, and are designed for grinding or bruising. 


In the ox, there are 8 incisors in the lower jaw, and none 
opposite in the upper. In place of incisors in the upper jaw, 
there is a kind of cartilaginous pad, against which the incisor 
teeth press in the act of dividing the food ; and it is by means 
of the incisors and this pad, that the ox partly cuts and partly 
tears the herbage plants on the ground. He has 8 incisors, 
then, in the lower jaw, and 6 molars in the upper jaw, and 6 
in the lower, on each side, in all 32 teeth, disposed thus : 
Molar. © Canine. Incisors, Canine. Molar. 
Upper jaw, : 6 6 
Under jaw, 3 6 0 8 0 6 

The Ox, like most of the ruminating tribes, is furnished 
with horns, which are the weapons of defence given to him. 
In certain cases, under the influence of domestication, the 
horns disappear, yet even then the animal instinctively strikes 
with his forehead, which, in the absence of horns, is strength- 
ened by a greater expansion of the frontal bones. In other 
cases, the horns become short and lose their sharpness, or 
even assume a direction which unfits them for inflicting 
wounds, a8 in the following figure of a Bull of the Long- 
horned Dishley Breed. 


EXTERNAL FORM. : cl 


The Ox possesses 7 cervical, 13 dorsal, 6 lumbar, and 5 
sacral vertebre united into one piece, with a varying number | 


of vertebre of the tail. ; . 
Proceeding at first horizontally from the spine, the ribs 
bend downward somewhat vertically, so that the back is 
broad. The ribs are very broad, and as they proceed back- 
ward, each projects more outward than the anterior one, so 
that at the abdomen the trunk is very large. As compared 
with the horse, the scapula is less oblique, and, with the 
humerus, forms a more upright shoulder ; the vertebre of the 
loins and back are of oreater size, the transverse processes 
are larger and stronger, the sternum is broader, presenting 
a larger surface to support the more extended chest of the 
animal, and for the attachment exteriorly of that mass, partly 
muscular and partly cartilaginous, which is termed the 
brisket, and which, in these animals, when largely fed, be- 
comes sometimes of great dimensions, almost reaching to the 


ground. The bones of the limbs are analogous to those of © : 


the horse, but at the fetlock-joint divide into two sets, so that 
in each limb there are two pastern, two coronet, and two 
coffin bones. The hoofs are thus said to be cleft, and each 
division has its own defence of horn. 

The muscular system of the ox is very large, covering in 
great mass the breast, the shoulder, the back, the haunch, 
the sides. The blood-vessels are of great size, the quantity 
of blood is large, and the circulation, as compared with many 
other quadrupeds, slow. The integuments consist of a thick 
skin covered with hair. 

As the natural conformation of the Ox differs greatly from 
that of the Horse, so there is an equal divergence in those 
characters of form, which we endeavour to communicate to 
him for the purpose of suiting him to our purposes, In the 
horse we require the exertion of physical force for the carry- 
ing of loads, for the drawing of weights, or for rapid motion. 
These purposes may be sought for in the ox intended for 
labour; but generally our purpose in rearing the ox is the 


cli . INTRODUCTION. 


production of human food, either the flesh of either sex, or 
the milk of the female for the products of the dairy. 

For the former of these purposes, namely, the production 
of the muscular or fatty tissue, we require in the Ox, as in all 
the other animals cultivated for the same productions, that 
the chest shall be wide and deep, and the trunk capacious, 
that the body shall be large in proportion to the limbs, or, in 
other words, that the limbs shall be short with relation to 
the bulk of the body, and that the bones shall be what is 
called fine, as indicated by the delicacy of the extremities. 

The head should be somewhat small, and rather elongated 
than short and thick. But in the bull, the forehead is na- 
turally more broad than in the female. When the head of 
the bull approaches to the narrow and elongated form of that 
of the female, he may be docile, and apt to fatten readily, 
but he will have lost too much of his masculine character, 
and may give birth to too delicate a progeny. yen in the 
refinement of breeding, therefore, we should desire to see the. 
bull possess so much of the masculine characters as to com- 
municate a sufficient degree of strength and hardihood to his 
descendants. On the other hand, should the head of the 
female approach too much to the masculine character of the 
bull, we shall have reason to infer from experience, that she 
will be deficient in the faculty of yielding milk. The chan- 
nel of the lower jaw should be wide, and the eyes, as indica- 
tive of health, prominent and clear. 

The bony ridge on the summit of the head, from which the 
horns proceed, should be somewhat raised, so that the horns 
shall appear to be slightly attached to the head. The length 
and size of the horns vary with temperament and race, and 
in certain breeds they do not exist. But, ceteris paribus, it 
is to be desired that the horns shall be delicate rather than 
coarse and thick; great thickness and coarseness of horn 
being usually connected with coarseness of the cuticular 
system. 

The neck, in the natural state, must be of such length that 


EXTERNAL FORM. cill 


the animal can reach the ground, and collect his food ; but if 
the limbs be short, so will the neck be in proportion to the . 
size of the trunk; and hence shortness of neck, with relation 
to the size of the body, is one of the points of character re- 
garded in the Ox. But an undue shortness of neck, like all 
deviations from the natural form, may likewise indicate dimi- 
nution of strength and hardiness. By refinement in breed- | 
ing, and by giving the animal his food from the birth in stalls | 
and mangers, his neck may become so short as to render him 
unable to reach the ground, and collect his natural suste- 
nance. 

A capacious trunk being connected with the property of 
fattening, the ribs should be widely arched, rising almost 
horizontally from the spine, and then bending downwards 
with a sweep, producing a wide and flat back, and likewise 
round sides, as far as the natural form of the ‘animal will 
allow. This is an important character in the Ox, in which 
narrowness of back, and too great flatness of sides, scarcely 
ever consist with the property of fattening quickly. In the 
Horse, we have seen, this conformation indicates weakness, 
and in a no less degree it indicates, in the Ox, the want of 
that vigour which is connected with the power to fatten. In 
the Horse designed for active motion, we required that the 
chest, at its commencement, should not be too wide, so as to 
plact the fore-limbs too far asunder, and that the breast 
should not extend too much in front of the fore-limbs, so as 
to render the animal heavy before. In the Ox, none of these 
characters can exist to the degree of being injurious. We 
require that the breast shall be wide and-well extended for- 
ward, and that the fore-limbs shall be far asunder. 

The shoulders should be broad at the top, and well covered 
with musele. The spines of the back and loins should be so 
enveloped in muscle as to cause the back to appear nearly 
straight from the neck backwards. The back and. loins 
should be somewhat long; for although a short and compact 
body indicates greater robustness and tendency to fatten, yet 


civ “INTRODUCTION. 


length of body increases the space for muscles, and conse- 
quently the weight of the animal. Breeders, therefore, look 
to length of trunk as connected with economical value; yet 
if this character be not combined with others which are good, 
as depth and roundness of trunk, and strength and breadth 
of back and loins, there will be more of loss by the dimi- 
nished tendency to fatten, than of gain by the larger extent 
of muscular surface. © 

The size of the haunch of the ox is not connected with the 
property of fattening; but it is connected, in an important 
degree, with the weight and economical value of the animal. 
The haunch commences with the iliac portion ‘of the pelvis, 
or haunch-bone, commonly called, in the case of this animal, 
the hook-bone or huckle-bone. These protuberances should 
appear as if nearly on a level with the back, and they should 
be distant from one another, indicating breadth over the 
loins. The upper line of the haunch should be long and 
straight to the bending downwards of the tail. The femur and 
tibia should be long, so that the size of the haunch shall be 
increased, and a larger space afforded for muscular substance. 
By enlarging the haunch in all its directions, the weight of 
the animal is increased, and this in a manner which does 
not, as in the case of extending the back alone, tend to pro- 
duce weakness. 

Corresponding with the width of the trunk, the fore and 
hinder limbs respectively will be far apart ; and ‘this, accord- 
ingly, is a point of form looked to by breeders as indicative 
of that lateral expansion of the body, which is sought for in 
the Ox, as in every animal to be fattened. The limbs, it has 
been seen, should be relatively short; but the fore-arm to the 
knee should be long in proportion to the part from the knee 
to the hoof; and, in like manner, in the posterior limbs, the 
leg to the hock should be long in proportion to the part below 
the hock. This character is desired in the Ox, Ist, because the 
parts above the knee and hock, respectively, contain muscle, 
while those below consist almost entirely of tendon; 2dly, 


) 
| 


EXTERNAL FORM. ev 


because the character indicates that delicacy of the extremi- 
ties which experience shews to consist with the property of 
fattening quickly. ; 

The Ox, when viewed in profile, should exhibit a square 
and massive form, filling the greater part of the rectangle in 
which he is contained. When viewed from behind, he should 
present the same square and massive aspect ; and the muscles 
on the inner side of the tibia, forming what is technically 
termed the twist, should be largely developed. The large 
flat muscles which surround the abdomen should be of suffi- 
cient strength to keep the belly from hanging. Generally, 
the muscular parts should appear to pass without abruptness 
from the one to the other. Thus, the muscles of the neck 
should gradually expand into those of the breast, and these 
again into the shoulders, while the muscles of the shoulders 
should pass into those behind, so as to leave littl2 hollow- 
ness; and the flanks before the stifle-bone should be well 
filled up.* 


* The following are the popular characters usually given as indicative of : 


the property of fattening, and the suitable furm, in the Ox; from which it will 
be seen, that the results of observation and experience accord with those which 
may be derived from an examination of the functions and structure of the 
parts. 

1. The head shall be fine, somewhat long, and diminishing to the muzzle, 
which shall be thin. 

2. The horns shall be fine, and placed on the summit of the head; the eyes 
shall be prominent and clear. 

3. The neck shall be free from coarseness, large where it joins the shoulder 
and breast, and diminishing to the head. ; : 

4, The breast shall be wide, and project well in front of the fore-limbs. 

5. The shoulder shall be broad, but join without abruptness to the neck be- 
fore, and to the chine behind. 

6. The back and loins shall be straight, wide, and flat. 

7. The girth behind the shoulders shall be large, and the ribs well arched. 

8. The hook-bones shall be far apart and nearly on a level with the back- 


bone; and from the hook-bone to the bending down of the tail, the quarter 


shall be long, broad, and straight. 

9. The tail shall be broad at the upper part, and small and progressively 
diminishing towards the extremity. 

10. The legs shall be short, fleshy to the knee and hock, and below the joints 
fiat and thin, and the hoofs shall be small. 

11. The skin shall be soft to the touch, the belly shall not hang down, there 
shall be little hollowness behind the shoulders, and the flanks shall be well 
filled up. 


spk gg an nt il Ll ll 
a as ee eT 


a etn — Saanetty Sain oe s 
ance Ag anne ye Sh en erty, yd 


evi INTRODUCTION. 


These are the principal characters which indicate, in the 
Ox, the property of adding to the fatty matter of the body, 
and, consequently, of becoming sooner fitted for human food. 
Those which indicate, in the female, the faculty of yielding 
much milk, differ in certain respects. The extreme broad- 
ness of chest, so important in the case of the fattening animal, 
is not required in the case of the milch cow, although there 
is nothing inconsistent between this conformation and the 
power of yielding much milk. But the points essential to 


the milch cow are rather connected with the hinder than with 
the anterior extremities. The loins should be wide, and the 
trunk deep from the loins to the mamme. This form exist- 


ing, the more the cow possesses of the other characters, the 
better is she fitted to combine the property of yielding milk 
with that of fattening. In a cow designed for breeding ani- 
mals to be fattened, the milching property is only secondary, 
yet a cow will produce the better calves that she is wide and 
deep in the lumbar region. A purely dairy cow should have 
a soft skin, clear eyes, and a narrow and elongated head ; 
the udder should be of good size, but have sufficient muscular 
power to prevent its being flaccid. The superficial veins’ 
near the udder should be well marked, but especially the 
large vein which runs along the lower side of the belly on 
each side, termed the subcutaneous abdominal vein. This 
last is popularly called the milk-vein, although it is not 
directly connected with the mammary organs. The follow- 
ing is an outline of a Dairy Cow of the Ayrshire Breed. 
Fig. 12. 


EXTERNAL FORM. evil 


The skin of the ox, it has been said, should be soft to the 
touch, but not thin; it should likewise be unctuous, and well 
covered with soft hair. By refinement in breeding, and espe- 
cially by breeding from animals near of blood, the hair be- 
comes short and scanty ; but when this is so, we are reminded 
that we are deviating from the natural characters in a point 
connected with hardiness of constitution. The colour of the 
hair depends upon causes which we have not yet been able 
to trace. In this country, certain races tend to the black 
colour, while others are never found but of the lighter. The 
Short-Horned and Hereford breeds are never found but red 
or white, while the Long-horned, like the cattle of the moun- 


tains, are often black. It does not appear that the colour of | 


the hair is of very great moment with regard to the hardi- 
ness of the animal, though, in cases of high breeding, as in 
the Short-horned variety, the white colour seems to be a con- 
sequence of constitutional deviation from the natural state. 
The muzzle, in certain breeds, is light or flesh-coloured, and in 


others black; and this character frequently affords an indica- _ 


tion of the purity of an animal, or, in other words, its free- | 


dom from intermixture of blood with other races. 


The Sheep differs greatly from the Ox in size and form ; 


but there are certain characters common to both, which in- 
dicate their adaptation to the same uses. In the Sheep, the 
cranium is relatively larger than in the Ox, the pieces are 


more closely united, and the frontal bones forming the fore- . 


head comparatively more thick, as if to fit the animal for that 
method of attack which is natural to him ; but generally the 
bones of the sheep are of a greatly less dense consistence 
than those of the ox. The Sheep has usually horns, which 
are rough, angular, and tending to the spiral, but under the 
effects of domestication, the horns frequently disappear in 
one or both sexes; and the largest and most highly culti- 
vated races of this country are destitute of horns. The or- 
bits of the sheep are large, and the eyes correspond in size 
and prominence with this conformation. 

The Sheep, like the Ox, is furnished with a cartilaginous 


I gee i cm ere 


Se IER 


a 


ee ARTO RN PET 


lk 
1 

' 
+H 


eviil INTRODUCTION. 


pad in the upper jaw, on which the incisor teeth of the lower 
press. His incisors have a certain power of motion, so that 
the animal can suit them to sinuosities of the surface when 
pasturing ; and his upper lip being partially cleft, he has the 
power of placing his mouth close to the ground, so that he 
can crop the shortest herbage. He has 8 incisor teeth in the 
lower jaw, and 6 molars on each side of both jaws, so that 
the disposition of his teeth may be represented, precisely as 
in the case of the ox, thus: 


Molar. Canine. Incisor. Canine. Molar. 


Upper jaw, : 6 6 


Under jaw, ‘ 6 8 6 


The Sheep has 7 vertebree of the neck, 13 of the back, 6 of 
the loins. The sacrum terminates in the caudal vertebra, 
which vary in number to 21. The sternum is thin, and has 
- attached to it the projection, partly pete and partly 
muscular, termed the brisket. 

The integuments of the sheep are thick and dense, covered 
partly with hair and partly with wool, kept soft by an oily 
secretion from the skin. In the wilder races the hair is 
largely mixed with the wool; under artificial treatment, the 
hair diminishes in quantity, and at length is confined to the 
face and legs, all the rest of the fleece being woolly. The 
filaments of the wool possess more or less tenuity, softness, 
and length. 

‘The following figure is an outline of a ram of the New 
Leicester breed, divested of his wool. 


— se a eR: Aelia piece tered apeemnet arenes 


EXTERNAL FORM. | cix 


The Sheep may be cultivated chiefly for the production of 
human food, or chiefly for wool for clothing. In this country 
the Sheep is chiefly cultivated for the former of these pur- 
poses ; and the same general characters which indicate the 
facility of fattening readily in the Ox, indicate it in the Sheep. 
But in producing those characters in the Sheep, there is a 
class of considerations to which we must pay regard even 
more than in the case of the Ox, namely, those which relate to 
health, and the conditions under which the animal is to subsist. 
The Sheep is subject to a multitude of dangerous maladies ; 
and great losses, extending to the destruction of whole flocks, 
may result from increasing his fattening properties, at the 
expense of robustness and general health. In certain cases 
he is maintained in an artifical state in a country of enclosures, 
but in others he is compelled to submit to the inclemency of 
all weathers, and to travel to great distances over the steril 
mountains, heaths, and downs, which afford him herbage. 
The same delicacy of form which might adapt him to one 
condition of external agents might unfit him for another ; 
and even under the most favourable circumstances, his deli- 
cacy of form and fattening properties may be increased at 
the expense of others not less necessary to be taken into 
the account. . 

The Sheep, like the Ox, may be said to stand within a rect- 
angle ; and the more of the rectangular space his body occu- 
pies in proportion to his limbs, the better is he fitted for 


producing a large quantity of muscle and fat in propor- 


tion to his dimensions. When we look, therefore, for this 
property alone, we say that in the Sheep, as in the Ox, the 
body should be large in proportion to the limbs, or, in other 
words, that the limbs should be short in proportion to the 
body. 

The head should be relatively small, as indicating that 
delicacy of the extremities which denotes an animal that 
readily assimilates his food. The face should be covered 
with short hair, the channel of the jaws should be wide, the 


| 


nr 5) ES 


pr tie 


 caendheutimnmmenia oa arma 


ee INTRODUCTION. 


external ears should be thin, the eyes prominent and clear, 
the neck should be short and well covered with muscles, 
which should expand quickly from the points of attachment 
at the cranium and jaws towards the breast and shoulder. 
_ A thinness of the neck, although not inconsistent with the 
property of fattening, usually indicates a deficiency of muscle 
on the breast and shoulder, and, generally, a want of vigour 


in the animal. i} 
The neck should be slightly arched ; but in certain races 


it is nearly level with the back. From the neck to the pel- 
vis the upper line of the back should be straight, and nearly 
so from the loins to the bending downward of the tail. -The 
back should be of medium length, and the distance between 
the last rib and the pelvis relatively short. Breeders, in- 
deed, desire a long sheep; but the character of length, de- 
rived from extension of the dorsal and lumbar parts, does 
not indicate vigour or disposition to fatten, but merely a 
larger extent of muscular substance. But the haunch should 
always be long from the haunch-bones backward,—this con- 
formation never indicating the weakness which may result 
from a too great extension in length of the back and loins. 

The upper line of the haunch, it has been said, should be 
long and straight from the haunch-bones backward. When 
it droops considerably, as in the less cultivated breeds, the 
conformation is regarded as defective. Further, the whole 
haunch or quarter should be broad and deep, corresponding 
to the depth of trunk, and the muscles should be largely de- 
veloped in the inside of the tibia, forming what is popularly 
called the twist. : . 

The ribs should be very curved, proceeding at first hori- 
zontally from the spine, from which conformation it will re- 
sult that the back will be broad as well as straight. In cer- 
tain highly cultivated breeds, the horizontal expansion of the 
ribs is so great that often it seems to the eye as if the body 
were more broad than deep. The transverse processes of 
the lumbar region-should, in an especial degree, be large, 


Be >> 


EXTERNAL FORM. exl 


indicating broad loins, a character denoting, in the case of 
all animals, strength of back and general hardihood. 

The haunch-bones should be distant from one another, in- 
dicating the character, before referred to, of broadness of the 
haunch ; the breast should be wide, largely covered with 
muscle, and projecting well in front of the fore-limbs. In 


consequence of the width of the breast, the fore-legs will be’ 


distant from one another, and the same character should ex- 
tend to the posterior limbs, indicating the lateral extension 
of the body at every part. The limbs should be fleshy down 
to the knees and hocks, and below these joints, narrow when 
seen from the front, and flat when seen in profile. There 


should be a general absence of angular points and hollows, 


as where the neck joins the shoulder, the shoulder the parts 
behind, and the loins the haunch. 

The skin, too, should present that softness to the touch 
which indicates facility in fattening in all animals known to 
us. It should be closely covered with wool, extending to 
the face, which is covered with a short hair, and to the knees 
and hocks, where the tendinous parts of the muscles begin. 

The characters which indicate the property of producing 
wool of different length and fineness have not been so accu- 
rately determined. It is known merely that different races 
have the faculty of producing wool different in the length, 
tenuity, softness, and other properties of the fibre. In gene- 
ral, the sheep long naturalized in countries of abundant 
herbage produce long thick wool, while those acclimated in 
countries yielding the finer herbage plants, produce wool 
more or less short and fine. But whatever be the conditions 
under which different kinds of wool are produced, it is known 
that the property can be transmitted from the parents to the 
young, in the same manner as other characters acquired. 

The Hog differs greatly in conformation and habits from 
the animals that have been described. His face is termi- 
nated by a cartilaginous disc, endued with great strength 
and exquisite sensibility, with which he grubs up the roots, 


2 


exil INTRODUCTION. 


larve, and other food which he finds under ground. His 
neck is strong and muscular ; his limbs in the natural state 7 
are short and stout; his skin is very thick, and covered with 
bristles. He possesses the kind of teeth suited to animals 
that are omnivorous, and the canines bending upward, be- 
come in the male formidable weapons. His feet are cloven, ys 
and defended by strong hoofs, and he has toes behind which 
do not reach the ground. The following is an outline of the 
Wild Boar and Sow, brought from the south of Europe. 


Fig. 14. 


SS \ YEE 
ptt WEE 


wip yO 
aK Hie 
Coil 


4 ve yi? Af 


fy soar 


Differing so greatly in conformation as this animal does 
from those which have been described, yet the same general 
characters indicate in him, as in all the others, the faculty 
of readily assimilating his food, and of quickly arriving*at 
that maturity of muscle and fatness, which fits him for the 

' uses for which he is destined; and there is no other animal 


known to us which so easily receives the characters which 
we seek to impress upon it, or transmits them more faith- 
fully to his offspring, 

The breast should be wide and deep, and the trunk capa- 
cious. The extremities, namely, the head, the tail, and the 
lower part of the limbs, should be delicate; and the legs 
should be short in proportion to the size of the trunk. 


— 


EXTERNAL FORM. Xi 


The skin should be soft and expansive, and the bristles soft 
and approaching to the character of hair. The following 
figures will shew the surprising deviation from the natural 
form which the animal, under the influence of domestication, 
exhibits. The first is an outline of the Old English Sow, 
exhibiting almost all the characters of external form which 
breeders study to avoid; the second is an outline of a cross 
between a female of the Siamese race and a native male of 
a fine breed, shewing the characters which are held to be 
good, and the consequent tendency to obesity which these 
characters indicate. 


= 


ES \ ‘4 
) DDN KG 


NJ 
X (; 


CG 


The physiological effects have been referred to of breeding 
from animals nearly allied to one another in plood. When 
carried to the degree of continually reuniting animals of the 
nearest affinities, as parents with their offspring, and brothers 
with sisters, the effect, after a time, is manifested in the im- 

h 


Kia 
Hh 
iis 
Me’ 
ie 
Wh! 
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4 


xiv INTRODUCTION. 


pairment of the constitution of the animals, and at length 
in unfitting them for reproducing their own kind. In the 
practice which has existed in England of forming artificial 
breeds of sheep and cattle, this class of experiments has 
been made to the degree of shewing the limits to which 
it can be carried, under a regard to the safety, and even 
existence, of the animals. In the original formation of some 
of the finer artificial breed8 of this country, animals were 
sought for having the characters which it was designed to 
cultivate. But the breeders, unwilling to mix the blood of 
inferior races with that of their own improved stocks, con- 
tinued to breed from them alone, and found, by experience, 
that the nearer in affinities of blood, and consequently of 
characters, the parents were, the more their progeny re- 
sembled them. Hence the extensive system of breeding 
“ in-and-in,” as it was called, pursued by the earlier breed- 


' ers, as Bakewell, Colling, and others. The effect was very 
| quickly to produce a distinct family, distinguished by the 


characters communicated to it. But this effect was followed 
by another which was not contemplated, and could scarcely 
have been inferred independently of experience. The ani- 
mals arrived sooner at maturity, and thus became more 
quickly adapted to the uses for which they were intended,— 
the supply of human food: so that one of the most import- 
ant ends of the breeder was attained, the procuring of ani- 
mals fitted to arrive at early maturity of muscle and fatness, 
in which respects some of the artificial breeds of England 
became the finest in the world, and still surpass those of any 
other country. But the practice was soon discovered to have 


its limits, and, when carried too far, to produce all the effects 


on the system which have been referred to. The animals, 
with their earlier maturity, and increased tendency to obe- 
sity, became less hardy; their skins became thinner, and 
the hairy or woolly covering more scanty; their limbs be- 
came more slender; the males lost so much of the masculine 
characters as often to be incapable of propagating their race, 


EXTERNAL FORM. CXV 


while the power of the females to secrete milk diminished ; 
and both sexes were rendered more subject to diseases, as 
apoplexy, and inflammation of the digestive and respiratory 
organs. While, then, it is important to be aware of this 


mean of communicating certain properties to animals culti- 


vated for human food, it is no less important to be aware 
of its tendency to impair that sound health, and constitu- 
tional hardiness, on which the profit of the breeder may 
often more depend, than even on an early maturity of the 
animal system. 


a 


THOMPSON, 


GOATS OF THIBET. 


J. THE GOAT. 


Or the Ruminating Animals, the most varied in their 
forms, the most beautiful and swift, are the Deer and Ante- 


lope tribes ; the former furnished with solid antlers of bone, , 
which, in all the species but one, are confined to the male, | 


and which fall off after the season of sexual intercourse; the 
A 


2 THE GOAT. 


latter possessed of hollow horns, like those of the Ox, the 
Sheep, and the Goat, enveloping permanent nuclei of bone 
proceeding from the forehead. Of the many species of Deer, 
only one, the Reindeer, an inhabitant of the northern glacial 
region, has been subjected to true domesticity, although in- 
dividuals of the other species may be readily tamed to sub- 
mission and dependence. Of the Antelope tribes, all the 
species remain in a state of liberty, apparently endowed with 
instincts which cause them to shun the dangerous vicinage 
of man. But the Antelopes, wild, timid, and indocile as they 
seem, are most of them gentle and submissive when reared 
up under human protection, and might, doubtless, like their 
congeners, be reduced to domestication: and further, the 
Antelopes approach by insensible gradations to the forms of 
those animals which Nature has fashioned to subject them- 
selves most readily to the physical force and moral influence 
of our race. At one point they are connected with the mas- 
sive forms of the Bovine group, and at another they pass 
into the Goats so nearly, that the line which separates the 
species scarcely forms a natural boundary. The chief dis- 
tinction between them and the Goats is in the bony nuclei of 
the horns, which, in the Antelopes, are hard and solid, in the 
Goats cellular, and communicating with the frontal sinuses. 
As the Antelopes pass into the Goats, so the latter pass into 
the Sheep. The internal organization of both the families is 
the same ; they bear their young for the same period, have a 
similar sound of the voice, and they breed with one another, 
giving birth to a progeny partaking of the characters of the 
parents. Both are covered with a mixture of hair and wool; 
but in the Goats the true wool rarely predominates over the - 
| hair, so as to form the essential covering of the body. The 
| horns of the Goat are more straight and upright than those 
of the Sheep, though in some varieties of Goats the horns 

are spirally twisted, and in some varieties of Sheep, as in 
_ the short-tailed kinds of northern Europe, the horns are as 
straight as in the Goat. The Goat has generally bristly 


HISTORY. 3 


hairs on the breast, throat, and lower jaw, forming a distinct 
beard ; but in some Goats these are wanting, and in some ae 
the ruder varieties of Sheep a beard appears, although it is 
never so fully developed as in the male of Goats. The Goat 
has a short tail, naked below, and carried more or less up- 
right; but this character likewise exists in certain races of 
Sheep, as in those of the Zetland Islands, and generally in | 
the other races of the extreme north of Europe. The skin 
of the Goat emits a peculiar musky odour, which, so far as 
is known, does not exist in any race of Sheep ; yet there are 
Goats in the countries of the East which are destitute of the 
hircine odour. It is said, indeed, that the Sheep is distin- 
guished from the Goat by the former possessing interdigital 
glands; but this character is not ascertained to be univer- 
sal; and it must, therefore, be admitted that all the charac- 
ters of form employed to discriminate the two groups are — 
technical and trivial. It is chiefly by the general aspect and \ 
habitudes of the species that we can separate them into ge- 
nera. The Goat always approaches more in form and habits 
to the Antelope tribes than the Sheep, and may be regarded 
as the connecting link between them. While the Sheep, in 
the state of domestication, is comparatively submissive and 
timid, the Goat is restless, bold, and independent, even when 
most enslaved. He is familiar and capricious, wanders at 
will from his fellows of the flock, and seeks the craggy sum- 
mits of the mountains where his native plants are to be found. 
He boldly faces the enemies that assail him, and manifests a 
greater confidence in his human protectors than the Sheep. 
From the earliest period of human societies, this wild and 
erratic creature seems to have been subjected to the power 
of man. We read of him as coeval with the Ox and the 
Sheep in those fair regions of the East where the first dawn 
‘of civilization appears through the mists of time. He en- 
tered into the mythological systems of the first nations, and, 
by the earlier observers of the heavens, was appointed to be a 
sign in the Zodiac, with Aries and Taurus, his fellows in the 
Service of man; although, in ancient Indian delineations of the 


4 THE GOAT. 


Zodiac, the Antelope, and not the Goat, is used as the sign 
of Capricorn. The Sacred Writings continually refer to the 
Goat as forming, along with the Sheep, the Ox, and the Camel, 
‘the riches of the patriarchal families. He is one of the ani- 
mals permitted by the laws of Moses to be used as human 
food, and he is ordained to be employed in a remarkable re- 
ligious ceremony. He was cultivated by the Hindoos from 
the earliest times ; and he is figured on the sculptured monu- 
ments of the Egyptians, in their representations of mystic 
emblems, religious rites, and rural labours. By the earliest 
writers of Greece and Rome he is continually referred to as 
yielding food and raiment; and superstition connected him 
-with the attributes and service of the Gods. He was dedi- 
cated to Jupiter Conservator, and sacrificed to Apollo, Diana, 
Bacchus, and the Paphian Venus, and his skin was the Aigis 
of the Goddess of Wisdom and Arms. His form was one of 
the attributes of Pan and the Satyrs, indicating the procrea- 
tive power and rustic plenty. He was domesticated by the 
Lybians and the nations that stretched along the southern 
shores of the Mediterranean inland to the mountains of Atlas. 
‘He was cultivated by the Dacians, Sarmatians, and other 
nations stretching from the Euxine into the wilds of Scythia. 
The Gauls and all the Celtic people of Europe appear to have 
been possessed of him in the domesticated state, using his 
hair and skin for garments, and his flesh and milk for food. 
Up to nearly the present day, the descendants of the pristine 
Celte cultivated the Goat, as one of the most useful of the 
animals given to them for food. Until a recent period, the 
Cambro-Britons and the Celtic people of the mountains of 
North Britain and Ireland, made greater use of the Goat 
than of the Sheep ; and many of their appellations of families, 
places, mountains, rivers, and natural objects, are derived 
from the name which it bears in the Celtic tongue. In like 
manner, the Scandinavian, the German, and other Teutonic 


nations, who had migrated in the first ages into Europe from | 
the East, were possessed of this gift of Providence, used his 
spoils for raiment and food, and coupled him with their wild 


HISTORY. 3 D - 
superstitions. In short, the Goat appears to have been 
domesticated wherever the traces are found of that great 
Western Family of mankind, which, united by analogies of 
form, speech, and traditionary legends, appears to have been 
derived from a common source, and spread from a common 
centre. But the domesticated Goat was not confined to this 
division of the human race. It extended, beyond a question, 
all through the boundless regions of Eastern Asia to the 
ocean, comprehending tribes and nations, which, however 
distinct from the western family of the human race in aspect, — 
character, and. speech, yet agreed with it in this, that the 
same domesticated animals ministered to the wants of both. 
But the insular continent of New Holland never possessed 
the Goat; for no trace of this, or of any of the ruminating 
animals which had elsewhere followed the footsteps of man, 
as instruments of civilization, was found at the discovery of 
this new world. Neither did it exist in any of the Polyne- 
sian Islands ; and, more strange and incomprehensible still, 
no vestige either of the domesticated Goat, or of his uni- 
versal companions in the ancient world, the Sheep, the Ox, 
and the Horse, was found in the great American Continent, 
though peopled from end to end. 

The wild animals of the Caprine group which have been 
as yet discovered, and described by naturalists, are the fol- 
lowing :— 


1. Capra IBEx, the Alpine Ibex. 

CAPRA CAUCASICA, the Caucasian Ibex. 

Capra SIBrRICA, the Siberian Ibex. 

. Capra Nusrana, the Nubian or Abyssinian Ibex. 
CAPRA AUGAGRUS, the Aigagrus. 

Capra JEMLAWICA, the Jemlah Goat. 

7. CAPRA JAURAL, the Jahral Goat. 


A eS 


The Auprine Ipex, the Bouquetin of the natives of the 
Alps, the Stein-bok, or Rock-Goat of the Germans, inhabits the 
Pyrenees, the Alps of Switzerland, and the Tyrol, and pro- 
bably other mountainous parts of Europe. He resembles the 


6 THE GOAT. 


domestic Goat in his external form, but surpasses it in sta- 
ture. He is protected by a coat of lank hair covering a down 
of delicate wool, which falls off in the warmer season. The 
eolour of his fur is a grayish dusky brown, fawn-coloured on 
the belly, and whitish on the inner part of the thighs, the in- 
side of the ears, and a part of the tail. He has a beard, and 
a dark brown ridge of bristly hairs extending from the neck 
to the tail, which is short and naked underneath. He has 
large black horns, bending backwards, and turning outward 
towards the pomts. His hoofs are large, widely cleft, and 
sharp at the exterior edges, so that he can fix himself se- 
curely on the points and shelving sides of rocks. This con- 
formation, joined to his surpassing power of balancing his 
body, and the great strength of his posterior limbs, enables 
him to make those amazing bounds from erag to crag, by 
which he is enabled to traverse the wilderness of rocks which 
he inhabits. He has been seen to spring up the steep side 
of a precipice of many feet, nay, striking the sides to give 


himself a fresh impetus, ascend to the perilous summit as if 
by a single effort; and, on the other hand, to precipitate 


himself from an eminence, alighting securely on the verge of 
the precipice. Itis believed by the hunters of the Alps, that, 
when springing from a great height, he bends his head be- 
neath his forelegs, so as to break his fall by striking the rock 
with his horns. It is rather to be believed, that his power of 
. thus precipitating himself is due to his nice power of balanc- 
ing his weight, and the conformation of the horny covering 
of his feet. The female resembles the male, but her horns 
are shorter, more slender, and less curved. She has two © 
mamme, forming an udder. She goes with young somewhat 
more than twenty weeks, and produces one, or often two, at 
-abirth. She receives the male about the end of October, so 
that the kids may be. born when the new shoots and leaves 
of the vernal season appear. When about to give birth to 
her young, she seeks some lonely place where she may be 
safe from surprise, usually near some rivulet or spring, pro- 
ceeding from the glaciers and mountains of snow which sur- 


a 


HISTORY. f 
round her. The kids, when born, are covered with a short 
gray fur of hair and wool; their limbs are stout, and their 
bodies light and buoyant; and in a few hours they are able 
to follow the dam, who vigilantly guards them from the at- 
tacks of eagles and other beasts of prey. 

These wild and powerful Goats are gregarious, and found 
in small flocks; but individuals separate from the herd, and 


- form their solitary lairs, like the stag and other deer. At 


the rutting season, desperate conflicts take place for the pos- 
session of the females, the stronger expelling the weaker, and 
thus fulfilling a natural provision for preserving the proper- 
ties of the race, by giving the privilege of propagating it to 
the most vigorous. They inhabit the highest part of the 
mountains, near the line of perpetual congelation and the 
limits of vegetable life, and beyond the range of the wildest 
of the Antelopes. They feed on the herbaceous willows, the 
juniper, the crowberry, and other plants of the higher moun- 
tains. In winter they descend to the lower slopes of the 
hills, but never venture into the plains and woods of the 
level country. They have the senses of sight, smell, and 
hearing, in exquisite perfection. Perched on the loftiest 
peaks, in the region of clouds and mist, they watch the mo- 
tions of their enemies, and on their approach give signal of 
danger to their comrades by a shrill whistle, when all betake 
themselves to the neighbouring mountains of rock and ever- 
lasting ice, where human foot cannot follow them. Yet they 
are made the subject of the chase by the hardy hunters of the 


Chamois Antelope, who steal upon them in their lonely lairs, 


or bring them down by the fatal ball from the distant preci- 
pice. When brought to bay, it is said they have been known 
to precipitate themselves upon their pursuers, and. hurl them 
down a precipice. Incessant persecution has thinned their 
numbers; go that, in the mountains of Europe, where they 
once abounded, they are now scarcely to be found. 

This creature, so powerful, vigilant, and wild, is yet formed 


3 to submit himself to human control. When the kids are 


8 THE GOAT. 


taken young, they are tamed with facility, and adopt the 
habits of the domesticated flock. They breed with the tame 
race, when kept together; and it is an old opinion of the 
shepherds of the Pyrenees and Alps, that Bouquetins some- 
times come down from the higher mountains and mingle with 
the females of the flock. The offspring of these supposed 
unions are said to be larger and more robust than the com- 
mon Goats, and are selected by the shepherds to be leaders 
of the flock. 

The CAUCASIAN IBEX, inhabiting the mountains of Taurus 
and the Caucasus, so nearly resembles the Alpine Ibex, in 
habits, colour, and form, that there seems to be no sufficient 
reason for regarding it as specifically distinct. The princi- 
pal divergence is in the horns; but how greatly the horns of 
the ruminating tribes vary with age and place, is known in 
other cases; and it is altogether probable, that the Ibex of 
the Caucasus is no other than the Ibex of the Alps of Eu- 
rope: and the same remark applies to the Ibex of the Ura- 
lian mountains, termed Siberian. If future observation shall | 

shew that these species are identical, then the Ibex must be 
characterized as having a surprising range of country. He is 
an inhabitant of most of the great mountain ranges of Asia 
and Europe, stretching from the Pyrenees to the Caucasus, 
and thence, it may be believed, eastward to the snowy heights 
of central Asia, and northward, by the Uralian and other 
mountain chains, to Siberia and the Sea of Okotsk. 

But Africa, where the forms of animal life present them- 
_ selves under a new aspect, possesses likewise its mountain 
Goats. The NuUBIAN or ABYSSINIAN IBEX, has been found 
at the eastern termination of that prodigious chain of moun- 
tains, which, more or less continuously, seems to intersect 
the continent from east to west. It is believed, but upon 
doubtful grounds, that the same species is found in the moun- 
tains of Arabia. The Abyssinian Ibex is described as being 
larger than the Ibex of Europe; as having little beard, but 
a ridge of long hairs on the throat and sternum, and a dark 


HISTORY. 9 


line on the anterior part of the legs and along the back ; and 
as having very large horns bent in a half circle:* 

The Aicacrus, Capra Aigagrus of Pallas, inhabits the 
mountain chains of Western Asia, from the Caucasus east-— 
ward, by the countries of the Caspian, to an unknown dis- 
tance, and southward, through the high lands of Persia and 
Caubul, into Hindostan. It is the Pazan of the Persians ; and. 
ig believed to be one of the animals which yield the concre- 
tion termed Bezoar, to which certain healing virtues are 
ascribed by the Orientals. It resembles the common Goats 
in its general form: it has very large horns, sometimes want- 
ing in the females, of a brown ashy colour, marked with 
tubercles, and sharp at the anterior edge, bending backward 
and turning outward at the points. The hair of the body is 
a grayish-brown, with a dark ridge along the spine, extend- 
ing to the termination of the tail. The beard, of a rufous 
colour, is long in the male, but shorter in the female, and 
coarse hairs extend from the throat down the breast. This 
creature is exceedingly wild, but inhabits a lower range of 
altitude than the Ibex. It is numerous in the higher parts 
of Asia Minor, and is believed by many naturalists to be the 
parent stock of most of the domestic Goats; and by some to 
be the common Goat restored to a state of liberty. | 

The JeMLAH GOAT, Capra Jemiahica of Colonel Hamilton 
Smith, is found in the most elevated parts of Central Asia. 
It is described by this eminent naturalist, from a skin trans- 
mitted to the British Museum, as being nearly of the size of 
the Ibex, and as having the horns nearly in contact at the 
base, of a pale ashy-buff colour, nodose, very depressed, nine 
inches long, bending outwards, then turning suddenly, so as 
_ to meet nearly over the neck. The bones of the head are 
dense and ponderous, the tail is very short, and there is no 
true beard. The colour of the hair, with the exception of 
some darkish streaks, is a dull light fawn, with locks of 


* Colonel Hamilton Smith. _ 


Pa — ee 
cere eens snaeatastat te et EC LCE aE = a TP RS SPT A ST ING “4 


10 THE GOAT. 


brown interspersed ; and on the cheeks the hair is long and 
coarse, hanging like a lion’s mane on each side of the head. 
Nothing is known of the habits of this beautiful Goat. Its 
external characters shew it to be distinct from the Ibex of 
the Caucasus and Europe. 

The JAHRAL GOAT, Capra Jahral of Hodgson, has been 
found in the mountains of Nepaul. It is described as having 
the head finely formed, full of expression, clad in short hairs, 
and without any vestige of beard. It is of a compact and ro- 
bust make ; is found solitary or in flocks; is bold, capricious, 
wanton, pugnacious, and easily domesticated. It has the 


horns nine inches in length, smooth, and sharpened towards 
the points, and not turned inward or nodose, like those of the 
Jemlah. It is clothed with a coat of hair covering a fine and 
delicate wool, of one length and colour. Superiicially the 
hair is brown, but internally it is blue, and the mane is for 
the most part of the same colour. The tongue, the palate, 
and the skin of the lips, are black, and the iris is of a deep 


‘reddish hazel.* 


In America, the Goat is represented by the Wool-bearing 
Antelope, which approaches so nearly in character to the 
Goat, that it is by some naturalists included in the latter 


genus. 


Such are the wild of the Caprine family which naturalists 
have discriminated ; but how far the list yet remains to be 
corrected, or extended, is unknown. The great mountains 
and elevated plains of Central Asia have as yet been imper- 
fectly opened to European research, and the paths of the tra- 
veller are but as specks and lines in the countries to be ex- 
plored. The boundless terraces and interior mountains of 
the African continent, which may be regarded as the centre 
of a distinct order of living beings, may be said to be as yet 
untrodden by the foot of civilized man ; and we know nothing 
of the treasures which this vast wilderness may contain, be- 


* Hodgson—Proceedings of the Zoological Society, 


5 
| 


HISTORY. 11 


yond the animals which approach the coasts, or are found in 
the few countries which are accessible. We may expect that, 
as future explorers advance into the wilder regions of the 
two continents, the natural history of the Caprine family will 
be illustrated and extended. But, as domesticated Goats are 
found in the possession of almost all the nations of the Old 
Continents, a natural inquiry, even in the present state of 
our knowledge, arises, as to the parent stock from which 
these animals, so generally diffused, have been derived. 
Ancient writers frequently speak of Wild Goats in a man- 
ner which leads us to conclude that they regarded them 
merely as the wild of the common race. But the notices of 
these writers are so vague and imperfect, that we do not 
know whether they referred. to the Ibex, the Mgagrus, the 
Chamois Antelope, or any other species formerly inhabiting 
the same countries, but now driven away or destroyed. The 
opinion prevalent until a recent period was, that the Ibex | 
was the parent stock of the common Goats ; but since the 
| Aigagrus has been admitted to be a distinct species, the 
general opinion of naturalists has been, that the latter rather 
than the Ibex, is the wild of the common Goat. But the 
Aigagrus does not approach nearer in habitudes and form to 
the common Goats than the Ibex; and although the latter 
inhabits a higher range of mountains, he seems to resign his 
natural liberty with equal readiness. Further, the Jemlah 
Goat, and, by analogy, we may believe, others of the genus, 
seem to be all endowed with the faculty of resigning their 
natural freedom, and submitting to domestication. The most 
. probable supposition, therefore, is, that the domesticated 
Goats have been derived not from one, but from different 
species. Not only do the Goats of different countries differ 
from one another, but there exist in the same country, under 
the same conditions of climate and food, races so divergent, 
that it is scarcely possible to believe that they have not been — 
| derived from stirpes distinct in the wild state. The Syrian if 
e Goat, so called, with a convex face and with an udder in the ; 


12 ; WHE GOAT. 


female hanging to the ground, is as different from the Com- 
_ mon Goats of the same country as the Jackal from the Wolf, 
and has retained, as we know from ancient notices, its dis- 
tinetive characters for twenty centuries at least ; that is, for 
nearly two thousand generations of the race. The little 
Goats of the coast of Guinea have been acclimated in America 
and the West India Islands for more than a hundred years, 
without making the least approach to those carried to the 
Same countries from Europe. These and similar facts are 
irreconcilable with the supposition of a common descent, and 
lead to the conclusion, that different species of Goats, having 
the property of procreating with one another, have produced - 
the domesticated races. 

The Goat, extended throughout so many climates and dis- 
tant countries, and subjected to conditions of life far different 
from those to which his natural instincts adapt him, must 
present himself to us with great variations of form and aspect, 
independently of the diversities arising from those of the 
| parent stock. Sometimes the horns disappear in one or 
both sexes, and in certain cages the animals become poly- 
" cerate; sometimes the hair is long, and sometimes it is as 
short as in the fallow deer ; and sometimes the beard is very 
long, and sometimes it is rudimental. The colour assumes 
every variety, from sandy-black to milk-white, and the size 
and form of the body are greatly varied. Of the Goats of 
Central Asia the most celebrated and best known in Europe 
are those of Thibet, which are noted beyond all others for 
the soft and delicate wool they produce, and which falls off 
in the warmer season, affording the material of one of the 
most beautiful fabrics of the Hastern looms. These Goats 
are long'in the body, having large faleated horns, stout 
limbs, and long glossy hair, frequently a foot and a half in 
length, trailing almost to the ground. The colour is fre- 
quently milk-white, but more generally it is brown, with 
points of a golden yellow. The wool, tending of itself to fall 
off at a certain season, is easily separated by means of combs, 


HISTORY. 13 


while the hair isleft. It is then spun by females, and after- 
wards the threads are dyed of the colours required. A shawl 
of the finest fabric takes a year or more in making. Four 
persons, and in the case of plain shawls, two, sit at a frame, 
using numerous needles. In working, the rough part of the 
shawl is uppermost. A superintendent regulates the pattern, 
and when the shawl is woven it is carried to the custom- 
house, stamped, and a duty paid upon it corresponding to its 
fineness and value.* In the province of Cashmere alone, it 
is computed that 30,000 of these beautiful fabrics are manu- 
factured every year. They are in universal demand over the 
East for their softness, durability, and the beauty of their 
colours. The Goats which yield the wool are chiefly derived 
from Thibet; Cashmere itself being too warm for the growth 
of the finest wool. The Goats of Thibet and the neighbour- 
ing countries have been introduced into Europe, in the hope 
of producing the fine wool which gives them so great a value 
in their native clime. In France especially, eager endeavours | 
were made to establish the manufacture of shawls similar to 
those of Cashmere; but from the small quantity of wool 
yielded by the Goats, and the great manual Jabour required, 
the manufacture did not succeed as a branch of national 
industry. Attempts, too, were made to introduce these Goats, 
for the production of wool, into England, but with still less 
prospect of a favourable result, from the humidity of the 
climate. The native country of these Goats, it is to be 
observed, being vastly elevated, is subject to extremes of 
temperature; and the growth of fine wool being a natural 


provision for keeping the animals warm, it would probably 


soon cease to be produced in more temperate climates. 
Stretching from the mountains of Thibet into the elevated 
steppes of the interior, northward to the Arctic Regions, 
eastward through Chinese Tartary to the ocean, and westward 
through the vast dominions of Russia to the confines of Europe, 


* Tour in the Upper Provinces of Hindostan. 


14 THE GOAT. 


the Goats of the settled inhabitants and nomadic tribes 
are in prodigious numbers. These Goats are thickly covered 
with long coarse hair, usually of a dark hue; but in the cul- 
tivated countries, they vary greatly in colour and other cha- 
racters. Inthe northern provinces of China, there are Goats, 
of a small size, which yield wool as abundantly as the sheep 
of the same country. Extending over the varied surface of 
Hindostan, the Goats assume a prodigious diversity of colour, 
aspect, and form. Sometimes they have horns, and some- 


times they are destitute of horns ; sometimes they have long 


pendulous ears: sometimes they have a short fur, like that 
of a fawn, and sometimes fine silky hair falling in glossy 
ringlets on each side of the dorsal line. The largest of the 
- Goats of Hindostan are brought from Caubul, Thibet, and the 
high lands of Persia. 

In the Turkish dominions in Asia, the races of Goats are 
greatly varied, and often very beautiful. The Goat of Angora 
is the native of a district of Asia Minor, and is remarkable 
for its long waving silky hair, which is spun into threads, of 
which a kind of camblet.is made, esteemed beyond all other 
cloths of the East for its durability. The Goats of Angora 
have been brought to France, where they have become readily 
naturalized, and do not appear to be more tender than the 
common kinds. They have been carried likewise to Sweden, 
and other parts of Europe; but it may be believed that, after 
a time, they will lose that peculiar softness of the hair which 
characterises them in their native country. The soil of An- 
gora is a chalky marl, which seems to have the property of 
communicating to the animals that live upon it a silky tex- 
ture of the hair. The Dog and Cat of the same country are 
distinguished by the glossy softness of their fur, and are very 
beautiful. , 

Of the other Goats of Asiatic Turkey, one is so peculiar, 
that it is plainly to be referred to an origin distinct from that 
of the Common Goats. It is frequently termed the Syrian | 
Goat, though it is not confined to Syria, but extends, by the 


HISTORY. 15 


countries of the Euphrates, into Arabia, and, with some slight 
change of characters, into Upper Egypt and Nubia. This 
kind of Goat was known to the ancients, who mention it by 
the name of the Syrian, and sometimes of the Damascus Goat. 
It is generally without horns, has the face singularly con- _ 
vex, long pendulous ears, delicate limbs, and short hair, » 
usually brown. The mamme of the females hang almost to 
the ground. These Goats are more docile than any other, 
and, yielding a large quantity of milk, are greatly valued in 
the arid countries over which they are spread. The same 
form of the Goat appears in Hindostan, and doubtless in 
other countries of Eastern Asia. In Nepaul a beautiful Goat 
is domesticated, which so much resembles the Syrian that 
both appear to be derived from a common stock. Itis of a 
slender form, with a convex face, without horns, and with _ 
long pendulous ears, which are generally white, or of a paler 
tint than the rest of the body. 

Africa abounds in Goats as well as Sheep. Along the 
Barbary coast, the Goats are very fine, resembling those of 
Greece, and other countries of the Mediterranean. From this 
country the Romans derived their choicest breeds. But 
southward of the mountains which bound the great basin 
of the Mediterranean, Nature presents a new aspect, and 
beyond the great Sahara, every living thing, up to man him- 
self, seems changed. But of the Goats of the interior we 
learn little from the casual notices of travellers. We are 
told only that Goats are very numerous, and often so nearly 
resemble Sheep, that the one might be mistaken for the other. 
On the coasts of Guinea, however, the cruel visits of Europeans 
have made us acquainted with a race of Goats, which differ 
from any other known tous. They are of diminutive size, very ) 
pretty, with short pricked-up ears, and generally with slender | 
falcated horns. They have been carried by the slave-ships , 
to the settlements of the Spaniards and Portuguese in Ame. 
rica, and to the West India Islands, and they have multiplied 
and remained distinct from the other races. 


16 THE GOAT, 


Of the Goats of Europe, the most varied and beautiful are 
those which inhabit the countries of the Mediterranean. 
They have generally horns, long flowing beards, and hair of 
divers colours, from milk-white to black. Those of Greece 
and the Islands of the Archipelago have been in esteem from 
early times. The writers of Greece refer to the Achaian, as 
a breed greatly valued. The Romans cultivated the Goats 
largely, and their rustic writers give us numerous details 
regarding the modes of rearing and treating them. In 
modern Italy, Goats: are very numerous, especially in Cala- 
bria and the mountainous countries. They abound likewise 
in Spain and Portugal, where they are cultivated chiefly for 
their milk, and the flesh of the kids. The Goats there are 
to be seen driven into the cities in the morning, and milked 
at the doors of the houses. In France, there are consider- 


able numbers of Goats, but of no peculiar beauty of race. A 


strong prejudice exists against them on account of the injury 
they cause to the vines and forests. The district in France 
most celebrated for Goats is the Canton of Mont d’Or, where, 
in a space not exceeding two leagues at its largest diameter, 
upwards of eleven thousand are kept, chiefly for the supply 
of the city of Lyons with cheese. In the northern countries 
of Europe, Goats are in considerable numbers ; but for the 
most part they are inferior in size and beauty to those of the 
countries of the Mediterranean. In the heathy mountains 
they become of small size, and are covered with a shaggy 
coat of long brown hair. Sometimes they have escaped from 
servitude, and become as wild and difficult to be approached 
as the Deer of the same countries. 

The Goat, though obeying the law to which all the domesti- 
cated animals are subject, and presenting itself under a great 
variety of aspect, retains many of the characters and habits 
which distinguish it in the state of liberty. It is lively, 
ardent, robust, capable of enduring the most intense cold, and 
seemingly little incommoded by the extremes of heat. Itis . 
wild, irregular, and erratic in its movements. It is bold in 


HISTORY. 17 


its own defence, putting itself in an attitude of defiance when 
provoked by animals, however larger than itself. Its horns 
turning outward at the points, it rises when it fights upon its 
hinder legs, and throwing the weight of its body sidewise, 
endeavours to maim its enemy by oblique strokes of the horns. 
The Ram, on the other hand, whose horns are turned inward, 
cannot use this method of attack, but‘rushes blindly upon his 
enemy, endeavouring to stun him by the violence of the shock ; 
while the Bull must lower his head to the very ground, in 
order that he may receive his adversary on the points of his 
horns. A dog that will despise a ram, and assail a bull, is 
frequently cowed by the peculiar mode of attack and bold de- 
meanour of the Goat. The domesticated Goat, like those of 
the wild species, is capable of nicely balancing its body; and 
its hoofs being widely cleft, moveable, and sharp at the exte- 
rior edges, it possesses the faculty of fixing itself on the shelv- 
ing edges of rocks, and of leaping from crag to crag. The 
Arabs teach a curious feat to their Goats, which manifests the 
wonderful power in the animals of balancing the body. A 
cylinder of wood is placed on the ground, on the top of which 
the Goat places all his feet ; another piece is then added, on 
which the animal likewise mounts; and then another, and 
another, until he stands at the summit of the column. When 
éwo Goats meet on a narrow ledge of rock, or the top of a 
high wall, the one crouches down, that the other may pass 


_over his body. The Goat, obeying his pristine instincts, de- 


lights in high places, climbs to the tops of walls and houses, — 
and leaps over the barriers intended to confine him. When 
kept in herds, individuals continually stray from the flock, 
and station themselves on the heights. In feeding, the flock 
gradually ascends to the higher grounds, preferring the 
shrubs and aromatic plants of the mountains to the richer 
herbage of the plains. Goats will eat of many bitter and 
narcotic plants which other animals reject, nay, of some 
which are deemed poisonous, as the hemlock and foxglove. 
They gnaw the bark, and crop the tender shoots, of shrubs 
B 


18 THE GOAT. 


and trees; and hence they are the pest of the cultivated 
country, destroying the hedges, the woods, and orchards of 
the planter. In the countries of the vine, they are regarded 
as enemies whose trespasses must be curbed by the severest 
means. When mingled in the flock with Sheep, the Goats 
invariably assume the guidance of their more timorous com- 
panions, leading them from the richer pastures to the more 
steril hills. When the Goat is kept apart from the flock, he 
becomes attached to his protectors, familiar and inquisitive, 
finding his way into every place, and examining whatever is 
new to him. He is eminently social, attaching himself to 
other animals, however different from himself. He is fre- 
quently kept in stables, under the belief that he contributes 
to the health of the horses. The effect, if any, is probably 
to be ascribed to his familiar habits, it being known that 
horses in their stalls are fond of companions to cheer their 
solitude. The Goat is frequently attached to the little car- 
riages of children, and appears to delight in the gay equipage, 
and capricious commands, of the youthful charioteers. Two 
children, in London, having escaped from their nurse, seated 
themselves in their tiny vehicle, and set off, whip in hand, 
along the Strand, The Goat, apparently enjoying the frolic, 
carried them full tilt through the most crowded parts of the 
city, nicely avoiding every obstacle, and foiling every attempt 
of the passengers to arrest him. Having satiated himself 
and his young masters with their morning’s drive, he brought 
them back to their home in safety. . 

The female of the Goat produces, in the natural state, in 
spring ; but when food is supplied to her, she will receive the 
male at almost any season. She goes with young upwards 
of twenty weeks, and is very prolific, generally producing 
two at a birth, and often breeding twice in the year. The 
Kids are exceedingly hardy, and the most sportive of animals. 
The mother watches them with tender care, protecting them 
from every assailant. She yields a large quantity of milk in 
proportion to her size, a common produce being two quarts in 


HISTORY: 19 


the day for five or six months. Her milk is viscid and nourish- 
ing, little productive of oil, but abundant in the matter. of 
cheese. She allows herself to be milked without reluctance, 
and readily adopts other animals, and nurses them as if they 
were her own. When she has suckled such animals as the 
foal and the calf, it is interesting to observe how she attaches 
herself to them, and still watches over their safety, when 
their own habits cause them to separate themselves from her. 
In India, the children of the Hindoos, who have lost their 
parent, are frequently suckled by Goats. Travellers report 
that, in the countries of the Negroes, this is very frequents 


The Goat comes to the cradle where the infants lie, and ma-_ 


nifests the utmost tenderness towards them; nay, when they 
are able to walk and play, she does not forget her maternal 
cares, but follows them as if to keep them from harm. — 
The Goat, besides the milk of the female, affords hair, 
which is shorn from the body, and made into certain coarse 
fabrics of the nature of camblets. Of this substance are 
formed the tents of the Arabs, of the Turcomans, and of all 
the migratory tribes of the Tartar countries. The hair of 
the Goat is likewise fabricated into ropes. With such ropes, 
the hardy natives of St Kilda used to swing themselves over 
the dreadful precipices of their coasts, in search of the eggs 
of sea-fowls. The skin of the Goat is made. into leather, 
which is more useful and durable than that of Sheep. It 
forms the fine Morocco leather of commeree, and is largely 
used for sandals, boots, gaiters, and similar parts of dress. 
In the countries of the Hast, the skin is likewise made into, 
bags, for containing water, wine, and oil ; and on many rivers, 
as the Nile and Euphrates, it is made into bags, for floating 
the inhabitants across the stream. The skin of the kid is in 
universal demand for the manufacture of gloves. The flesh 
of the kid, when very young, is nearly as delicate as that of 
the lamb. The flesh of the older Goats is hard and ill- 
flavoured, and therefore always gives place to that of the 
Sheep, as countries become cultivated. 


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20 THE GOAT. 


In the British Islands, the number of Goats has been con- 
tinually diminishing, with the extension of sheep, and the 
progress of agriculture. In the Highlands of Scotland, they 
used to be very numerous, but are now confined to a few of 
the remoter districts, where their milk is employed for the 
making of cheese. Wales long abounded in Goats: they are 
now in small and decreasing numbers, and the finer and 
larger kinds have been lost. But in Treland, there are still 
great numbers of Goats, scattered throughout the country, 
and kept by the poorer inhabitants for supplying them with 
milk. The Goats of Ireland are many of them very fine: those 
of Kerry and the other mountain districts, resemble the best 
Goats of the Mediterranean, and even exceed them in size. 

In this country, it is chiefly for the supply of the domestic 
dairy that the Goat can be regarded as of economical value. 
This arises from the want of demand for the flesh, even for 
that of the kid, which is so delicate. Were it otherwise, the 
Goat could be cultivated in the mountainous parts of the 
country with perhaps greater advantage than the Sheep. 
The hair of the Goat is indeed less valuable than wool, yet 
the skin is of greater value than that of the Sheep. The 


animals, too, are more hardy, and exempt from those fatal 
diseases which yearly destroy so great a proportion of the 


Sheep of the higher countries. The Goat, too, is more easily 
maintained, especially in countries of heath, and the females 
are more prolific. But an insurmountable objection exists to 
the extension of the husbandry of the Goat, from the want of 
all demand for the flesh of the fattened animal. Yet if the 
caprice of taste could be reconciled to the use of the kid, the 
Goat could be kept for the rearing of her young as a substi- 
tute for the house-lambs, now produced at so much cost. 
The females, in this case, could be made to yield their kids at 
any season. They could be kept in houses and fed on the 
commonest hay, with occasional portions of turnips or green 
food of any kind. They could be maintained at less expense 
than the Sheep; and as they are more prolific, and yield a 


HISTORY.’ re i 


large supply of milk after the kids are taken away, the profit 
would certainly be greater than from the ewe under the same 
circumstances. But as the habits of a people, with respect to 
food, cannot without great difficulty be changed, it is probable 
that, in these Islands, the Goat will continue to be only par- 
tially cultivated, as now, for the milk of the female. But for 
this purpose its value, as a source of household economy, is 
much greater than many imagine. Families who keep a 
single cow would find a Goat or two always useful, as sup- 
plying milk when that of the other was wanting ; and expe- 
rience shews, that the humbler cottagers would derive a profit 
from having one or two of these animals, which could be 
maintained on food which the cow would reject. Persons 
even in large towns could, by means of the Goat, readily sup- 


ply themselves with milk far superior to that which they can 


now obtain; and it is surprising that a method so simple, of 
avoiding the frauds too much practised in the case of this 
kind of food, should be neglected. Goats bear well the 
motion and confinement of shipboard, and are better fitted 
for supplying milk on sea-voyages than any other animal. 


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SOUTH DOWN EWE AND LAMB. 


Ii. THE SHEEP. 


The Ovint FAMILY, it has been seen, differs so little in 
conformation from the Caprine, that zoological characters can 
scarcely be found to discriminate them. Yet, in every coun- 
try where these animals are known, they are separated in 
popular language, shewing that each possesses habitudes 
and external characters sufficient to distinguish it from the 
other. Sheep have the bodies more massive, and deviate 
more from the Antelopian type, than Goats ; the horns, where 
they exist, are generally more angular, furrowed, and spiral ; 
and the rams are destitute of the hircine odour. Of the spe- 


HISTORY: I58 


‘cies of true Sheep which have been found in the state of na- 
tare, those most generally admitted into zoological systems 
are :— 


1. Ovis Ammon, the Argali of Asia. 

2. Ovis Monwana, the Rocky-Mountain Sheep. - 
3. Ovis TRAGELAPHUS, the Bearded Argali. 

4. Ovis Musimon, the Musmon. 


The ARGALI of ASIA is somewhat less than the size of a stag. 


He has enormous horns, measuring about a foot in circum- 


ference at the base, and from three to four feet in length, 
triangular, rising from the summit of the head so as nearly 
to touch at the root, ascending, stretching out laterally, and 


bending forward at the point. He has a fur of short hair, 
covering a coat of soft white wool. The colour of the fur 


externally is brown, becoming brownish-gray in winter: there 
is a buff-coloured streak along the back, and a large spot of 
a lighter buff colour on the haunch, surrounding and in- 


‘cluding the tail. The female differs from the male in being 
‘smaller, in having the-horns more slender and straight, and 


in the absence of the disc on the haunch. In both sexes the 
tail is very short, the eye-lashes are whitish, and the hair 


beneath the throat is longer than on other parts of the body. 


These creatures inhabit the mountains and elevated plains 
of Asia, from the Himmalaya Mountains westward to the 
Caucasus, and eastward and northward to Kamschatka and 
the Ocean. They are agile and strong, but very timid, shun- 
ning the least appearance of danger : their motion is ZIQZAg, - 
and they stop in their course to gaze upon their pursuer, after 
the manner of the domestic Sheep. They are usually found 
in very small flocks ; and, at the rutting season, the males 
fight desperately, using their horns and forehead in the man-— 
ner of the common ram. They are hunted by the people of 
the countries for their flesh, which is esteemed to be savoury, 
and for their skins, which are made into clothing. In autumn, 
after having pastured during the summer on the mountains 


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24 THE SHEEP. 


and secluded valleys, they are fat, and in request; but as 
winter advances, and they are forced to descend from the 
mountains in search of food, they lose their plumpness, and 
are sought after only for their skins. When taken young 
they are easily tamed, but the old ones never resign their 
natural wildness, 

The Rocky-MoOUNTAIN SHEEP, or Argali of America, is 
allied to this species, or identical with it. I+ inhabits the 
loftiest mountain chains of North America. It was long 
ago described by Spanish writers as the Sheep of California, 
and is familiar to the Indians and fur-traders of Canada. 
It equals or surpasses the Asiatic Argali in size, and is taller 
than the largest of our Domestic Sheep. Its horns are very 
large, approaching, but not touching, one another at the base. 
The horns of the female are small, and slightly curved. The 
fur is of a reddish-brown colour, but becomes paler in winter, 
and in spring the old rams are nearly white. The face and 
nose are white, and the tail and buttocks present the buff- 
coloured disc which distinguishes the male of the Asiatic 
species. They collect in flocks, under the guidance of a 
leader. They pasture on the steepest parts of the moun- 
tains, and on the approach of winter descend into the plains. 
They are wild and timid, betaking themselves on the least 
alarm to the summits of the mountains. They are pursued 
and killed by the Indians for their flesh and skins, and neve 
never been subjected to domestication. 

The BEARDED ARGALI inhabits the inland steeps of lia 
and the mountains of Egypt. It is larger than a fallow deer, 
and nearly equal in size to a stag. The horns are thirteen 
inches in circumference at the base, approaching near to one 
another on the top of the head, angular, black, bending back- 
wards and downwards, and about two feet in length. The 
hair on the lower part of the cheeks and under-jaw is long, 
forming a divided beard. The under part of the neck and 
shoulders is covered by coarse hair ; on the upper part of the 
neck, and especially at the withers, the hair is long and 


HISTORY. O5 


bristly, forming a mane; the knees are covered by long 
dense hairs, as if to protect them when the animal kneels ; 
the hair on the rest of the body is short, and underneath the 
whole is the rudiment of a soft fine wool. Itis a gentle and 
petulant creature, fond of ascending to high places, as the 
roofs of houses, capable of running swiftly, and of bounding 
with prodigious force. 

The Musmon inhabits the lofty regions of the Caucasus 
and ancient Taurus, and still lingers in the islands of Crete 


and Cyprus, and the mountains of Greece. It is smaller than. 


the Argali. In the male the horns are two feet in length ; 
in the female they are often wanting. They are very thick, 
and they turn inward at the points, in which respect they 
differ from the horns of the Argali, which bend outward. 
The fur consists of a brownish hair, concealing a short, fine, 
gray-coloured wool, which covers all the body. 

The Musmons, although resembling the Argalis, are small- 
er and less powerful, and inhabit, apparently, a lower range 


of mountains. They are gregarious, assembling in large 


flocks during the summer months; but, at the rutting season, 


fierce contests take place between the rams, and the herd 


divides into smaller bands, consisting of a male and several 


females. These animals are readily domesticated, and exhi- , 
bit all the habits of the Domestic Sheep, although, in the first | 
generation at least, they do not entirely resign their natural _ 
wildness. They breed freely with the Domestic Sheep, and ‘a 
the offspring is fruitful. Pliny mentions such alliances as be- ry 


ing common, and states that the progeny were termed Umbri. 
A species, or variety, termed by M. G. St Hilaire, Mou- 
flon d’Afrique, appears to resemble the Musmon of Asia 
and Europe. It has been found on the mountains bordering 
upon the plain of the Nile. Itis about the size of a com- 
monram. The horns are two feet long, and eleven inches 
in circumference at the base, diverging outwards, so that the 
extremities are about nineteen inches from one another. 
Another species of Musmon, or an animal nearly allied to 


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i THE SHEEP. 


it, has been found in Nepaul, both on the Indian and Thibe- 
tian sides of the snowy crests of the Himmalayas. It is de- 


scribed as having horns twenty-two inches along the curve, 


diverging greatly, but scarcely spiral; and as having fur of 
a bluish-gray colour inclining to red, the hairs concealing a 
scanty fleece of fine soft wool.* . 

These are the wild species of Ovidee which have as yet been 


described. But there is just reason to believe that others 


exist, although as yet too imperfectly known to be placed in 


the catalogues of naturalists. It is certain that Wild Sheep, 


approaching even more to the characters of certain domesti- 
cated races, exist in the immense countries bordering on the 
Hindoo Koosh, namely, Caubul, and the countries of the Tur- 
comans, Persians, and others, towards the Caspian. One of 
these is described by Mr Fraser, in his interesting travels in 
these wild countries, as having been killed by the hunters of 
his party, and as being a fine animal, equal in size, and supe- 
rior in strength, to the largest of the common races. It pro- | 
bably resembles a race of Sheep widely domesticated in the 
same countries, which has by some been termed the Persian 
breed, but which is to be distinguished from another race, to 
be afterwards referred to, found in the same country, and 
likewise termed Persian. The Sheep in question are covered . 


_ with a very coarse hairy fur of a gray colour. Their horns are 


bent outward in the manner of the Argali, and, what is worthy 
of note, the head entirely resembles that of the Ram, as it is 
depicted on Eastern sculptures. This domesticated race is 
very widely diffused, extending to the Tartar countries inland; 
to Arabia, where it forms the most common breed of the Be- 
douins ; and across the Indus over a great part of Hindostan. 

Ancient writers, too, speak of Wild Sheep, but with notices 
so indistinct, that no conclusions can be founded upon them. 
It is not certainly known whether Wild Sheep existed in the 
west of Europe. Boetius, a chronicler extremely credulous, 


* Proceedings of the Zoological Society, and.the Asiatic Transactions. 


HISTORY. OgT 


‘yet worthy of trust as to what he says he heard or saw, 
‘mentions the existence of a race of Wild Sheep in the deso- 
‘late island of St Kilda. He describes them as being larger 
‘than the largest goats, and as having tails hanging to the 


-ground, and horns more bulky than those ofthe ox; and, ac- — 
-eording to Mr Pennant, an animal corresponding with this 


‘description is figured on a bas-relief taken from the wall of 
Antoninus, near the modern city of Glasgow. 

Looking at the vast diversities in the Sheep of different 
‘and distant countries, and the constancy with which certain 
‘races preserve their distinctive characters under the same 
conditions .of temperature, food, and treatment, we are 


-eonducted to the conclusion, that Wild Sheep proper to , 
different countries have been domesticated by the inhabi- ee 


‘tants; and, accordingly, that the domesticated races are 


not of one, but of various species, having the property of | 
procreating with one another in the reclaimed state. The _ | 


game hypothesis, we have seen, has been applied to the Goat, 
-there being no other which satisfactorily explains the per- 
manent differences which -races of those animals exhibit 
under the same conditions from age to age. A like suppo- 
‘sition, we shall see in the sequel, must be made in the case 
of the Dog, in order to enable us to account for those great 
‘variations which the domesticated races present in almost 
-every country. The opinion, we shall see, that may most 
reasonably be entertained regarding the origin of the Do- 
“mestic Dogs, is, that they are descended from the Wolf and 
other Canide yet found in the wild state; and there is no 
‘more difficulty in assuming the derivation of the Sheep than 
-of the Dog from species yet existing in the state of nature, 


“since the habits and forms of the Argalis and Musmons as - 
‘nearly resemble the cultivated Sheep as the Wolf and other 


“species of Canis resemble the common breeds of Dogs. Even 
‘the blood of the Goat, though of a species admitted, under 
“every zoological system, to be distinct, has certainly been 


28 THE SHEEP. 


mixed with that of the Sheep of various countries. Sheep 
and Goats, indeed, when left free to select their own mates, 
do not breed together, but the union is readily produced 
when the males of one species only are present at the rutting 
season ; and it has been long known to shepherds, though 
questioned by naturalists, that the resulting progeny is fruit- 
ful. Breeds of this mixed race are numerous in the north 
of Europe, and can scarcely have failed to take place in every 
country where Sheep and Goats are herded together. 

We may believe, then, that the Domesticated Sheep, the 
Ovis ARIES of naturalists, is a factitious Species, and not one 
which has been called forth in the natural state. A species 
of this kind, however, having been formed, by whatever mix- 
tures of blood, the members of it must have been subject, like 
every other family mixed or pure, to vary under the influence 
of external agencies; and thus, independently of the differ- 
ences produced by differences of origin, there are those which 
have been produced by climate, food, and domestication, giv- 
ing rise to those great varieties which, even under the nar- 
rowest geographical limits, present themselves. 

From whatever sources derived, these valuable animals, 
we know, have been subjected to servitude from the earliest 
times. The most ancient written records of the Southern 
Asiatics refer to the Domesticated Sheep; and he is figured 
on the oldest monuments of the past, which time has left us, 
in Western Asia. On the sculptured remains of Egypt, 
the Sheep continually appears, and of a form which we can 
identify with that of the same animal still existing. The 
Sacred Writings record its existence along with the first 
known inhabitants of the earth; and the flocks and herds of 
the wandering Shepherds of the East, are described with a 
minuteness, which enables us to compare the pursuits of the 
most ancient people with those of the inhabitants of the same 
countries at the present hour, Scarcely any thing seems to 
have changed in the habiis of men in those countries of pas- 


HISTORY. 29 


toral tribes. Where Abraham pitched his tent, with his 
“sheep and oxen,” and “asses and camels,”—where he sat 
at the door of his tent,—where the stone was rolled from the 
wells from which his maidens drew water,—there the Arab 
or the wandering Turcoman encamps, and all the scene is 
like a vivid panorama of the past. In the case of the present 
people of the Desert,—their tents, their journeyings, their 
household cares, their flocks, their camels, their wells,—all 
inform us with what a matchless fidelity the Sacred History 


has been told. 


Of the Sheep, we learn that its fleece was used by the 
Shepherds of Syria for the purposes to which it is now ap- 
plied, and that it was short from the skin. “ Then Jacob 
rose up and set his sons and his wives upon camels; and he 
carried away all his cattle, and all his goods which he had 
gotten, the cattle of his getting which he had got in Padan- 
aram, for to go to Isaac his father in the land of Canaan: 
And Laban went to shear his sheep.” * “ And Judah was 
comforted, and went up unto his sheep-shearers at Zim- 
nath.”+ And at a long subsequent period, when the de- 
scendants of Judah had become a nation, and acquired the 
Land of Promise, the season of sheep-shearing is referred to 
as one of rustic labour. Further the wool was woven into 
cloth, which infers an advancement beyond the ruder stages 
of the arts. The mere barbarian uses, for raiment, the skin 
of the Sheep or Goat, with its covering of hair, as was prac- 
tised by the Scythians, by the Gauls and Britons, and at the 
present day by the Kalmuks and other nomadic people of 
Asia, and by the Hottentots and other inhabitants of Southern 
Africa. When cloth is made by barbarous tribes, it is simply 
by pressing the wool together in a moist state, so as to form 
felt, as we yet see done in the case of hats and beavers; by 

* Genesis, xxxi. 17 : 18, 19: And it is worthy of note, that the undergoing 
of a period of servitude to acquire a wife, recorded in the history to which 
these passages refer, exists at the present day amongst a wild tribe in the heart 


of India, which is designated by the term Laban-a. 
+ Genesis, xxxviii. 12, 


30 HISTORY: 


which means the fibres adhere, and become’ intertwined in 
such a manner as to form a species of cloth; and of this 
simple manufacture were the woollen garments of the rude 
people in the north of Asia and Europe. The use of the dis- 
taff and the shuttle infers a considerable advancement in the 
arts. Yet at this stage, we know, by indubitable records, 
the wandering tribes of Syria had arrived, long ere the golden 
fleece had been acquired by Jason, or ere Minerva had com-~ 
municated to her Athenians the gifts of spinning and weaving: 
And besides the spindle and the simple loom of, the Hast, the 
Syrian Shepherds had, from early times, acquired the know- 
ledge of the art of communicating to their cloths and gar- 
ments those beautiful colours which so much please the eye. 
The fondness of a parent, and his gift of a many-coloured 
garment to a favoured child, gave rise to a tale which, in 
beauty and pathos, cannot be surpassed; and even yet, 
amongst the people of India, the practice exists of giving to 
a favourite boy a garment of many colours, as a charm 
against evil. The flesh of the Sheep was likewise used, but 
with that temperance which still distinguishes the people of 
those countries in the use of animal food. It was from the 
milk of their flocks that they derived the chief part of their 
daily food. They understood the art of curdling the milk of 
their goats and ewes; and cheese and butter, with fat and 
honey, formed the simple repasts of these early shepherds, 
as of the Kurds, the Turcomans, and Arabs, of the present 
day. . . 

Domestication renders the Sheep more suited to our uses, 
but diminishes his physical powers, and adapts him to another 
condition of life. When once completely subjugated, he never 
again appears to acquire the faculties which fit him for a life 
of liberty. Give him afterwards what freedom we may, he 
remains more or less dependent upon us, and would fall a 
prey to wolves, and the swifter fere, were he not under 
human protection. Yet he is not the stupid and insensible 
creature which some represent him to be. When entirely 


“HISTORY. OL 


subdued, indeed, his natural instincts are blunted, and he 
loses the providence and sense of danger which are natural 
to him; but when left in a state of comparative liberty, as on 
the mountains of Scotland and Wales, he shews that, though 
comparatively feeble, he is not without the power of guard- 
ing himself from danger. When attacked by dogs or foxes, 
the flock forms a circle, with the rams in front, presenting a 
face to the enemy. The rams rush forward on the assailant, 
and strike him with their powerful horns; and in their con- 
"tests with one another for the possession of the females, they 
fight with amazing determination, stunning one another with 
the violence of the shocks. The Sheep is an exceedingly hardy 
animal with respect to temperature, his close covering of wool 
defending him well from cold. He foresees an impending fall 
of snow, and takes shelter from its violence. When buried 
underneath the snow, as he sometimes is, he often survives | 
for many days, and even weeks, and may be digged up with- 
out injury, provided he have escaped suffocation ; for in such 
a situation, his thick fleece, which, as well as the snow, is a 
slow conductor of heat, retains the natural warmth of the body _ 
in such a degree as to preserve life. The ewe bears that affec- 
tion to her offspring which Nature has imprinted, as it were, 
_ on the heart of every animal. Should mishap befal her young 
one, she mourns over it, and will not be comforted: should it. 
wander from her side, her anxious bleatings are everywhere 
heard ; and the little creature rewards her cares with surpris- 
ing fondness. Who that has seen shearing of the flock, has not 
marked the startled aspect of the lamb when the mother first 
runs toward it divested of her covering, and how quickly it is 
reassured, and how sensibly it expresses its joy, when it hears 
the well-known voice, and receives the wonted caresses! The 
Sheep appears insensible and stupid, because it is rarely at- 
tached to us by acts of familiarity and kindness. But let the 
orphan lamb be brought up at the shepherd’s cot, and fed 
from his hand, and we shall find it to be nearly as fami- 
lar as a dog,—fond of being caressed, and unwilling to leave 


8 


$2 THE SHEEP. 


its protector to join its fellows of the flock. In countries 
where the shepherd guides his flock, and does not herd it by 
dogs in the manner practised in other places, the docility 
which the animals acquire is wonderfully great. Where the 
shepherd leads they follow; they observe his motions and 
hear his voice, and when he uses a pipe or horn, they listen 
to the well-known sound, and obey the signal. In the Alps 
of Switzerland, and in the mountainous parts of Italy, in 


Greece, and elsewhere, we are yet charmed with this rem- 
nant of pastoral simplicity and innocence. The shepherd 
boy knows all his little favourites;—he remembers their 


names, and, when called, they leave the flock and come to 


Se a 


him. When the numbers are great, he selects a few, teaches 
them their simple lesson, and they become the guides of the 


rest to their allotted pastures, aad learn to collect the wan- 


ss 


derers. The music of the mountain shepherd we find to be 
no poetic fiction. In the mountains of the South, we yet 
hear the soft and artless tones of his pipe. In the morning 
he leads forth his little flock, and plays as he marches at their 
head, and at sunset returns in like manner to the fold, where 
he pens them, that they may be kept from the wolves. 

The fur of the Sheep consists partly of hair, but essentially 
of wool. In cold, moist, and elevated countries, the hair 
often becomes so long as to cover the wool ; and when the 


al 
ai 
a 


ti 
4 


wool falls off in the early part of summer, the covering of 
hair remains to protect the animal. In warm countries, the 
wool is often scarcely developed, and nearly the whole coat 
is of hair, just as in the case of the Deer, the Antelope, and 
the Goat; yet this is not always the case, even in the warmer 
| countries, in which the fur is sometimes fleecy, soft, and thin. 
' Often the wool is long, and the filaments thick, without being 
hairy, as in the case of the Sheep of the richer plains of Eng- 
land; sometimes it is short, fine, and curling, as in the case 
of the Mountain Sheep of Spain. ‘We can sometimes trace 
the influence of climate in modifying the characters of wool, 
but often it is affected by causes which we are unable to dis- 


2 
a 


HISTORY. 33 


Cover. It is often affected by domestication and artificial 
treatment. The difference in the character of wool renders 
it more or less valuable, and more or less suited to different 
manufactures. Thus, the long thick wool of the Sheep of the 
Plains of England is suited to the manufacture of flannels ; 
that of the South Down, Ryeland, and Merino breeds, to the 
fabrication of cloths ; that of the Blackfaced Heath Sheep of 
Scotland, to the making of carpets and coarser stuffs. The 
colour of the wool of Sheep is yet less dependent upon any 
known causes than its texture, length, or fineness. Some- 
times it is black, sometimes it is gray, sometimes it is brown, 
and in other cases it is white, or partly black and partly 
white. We know no law which determines these colours. 
There is reason to believe that the colour of the fleece in the 
earlier Sheep tended to the darker colours rather than to the 
lighter, as it yet does in Sheep that are left long in their 


natural state. But the white colour came to be more valued, - 


as being more agreeable to the eye, but chiefly because white 
wool is better fitted to receive those bright and beautiful 
colours which we are enabled to communicate by the dyeing 
Process. But the desire to obtain white wool being formed, 
it was easy to procure white Sheep, by using males and 
females for breeding which were possessed of that colour. 

With respect to the races of Sheep which have been domes- 
ticated in different countries, a diversity so great is presented 
in the form and size of the animals, nature of the fleece, and 
other characters, that nothing beyond the most general classi- 
fication can be made when we refer to Sheep extended over 
Many and distant countries. 

Looking to Asia, which may be considered as the cradle of 


the principal domesticated races, it may be said that there | 


are two groups of cultivated Sheep, each, however, compre- 

hending innumerable breeds ;—first, those with flat tails 

naked underneath ; and, secondly, those with long round 

tails covered with wool. The Flat-tailed races have a won- 

_ derfully wide range, extending from Caubul northwards to 
aes 


yh he 


“hy 


ot THE SHEEP. 


near the Arctic Circle, eastward through the boundless wilds 
of Chinese Tartary, and westward through Persia into Asia 
Minor and Syria. In the higher latitudes of Asia, the same 
; character is retained ; but the Sheep themselves become di- 
| minutive, and the tail is small, and carried upwards in the 
manner of the Goat. The small Sheep with this character 
have been regarded by naturalists as a variety or class, 
which has been termed Brevi-cauda. In the more tem- 
perate latitudes, the flat tail becomes long, and, in certain 
countries, is loaded with fat, so as to form a great part of 
the weight of the animal. This peculiarity is the most deve- 
loped in the Sheep of the countries of the Euphrates, in Asia 
Minor, Syria, and part of Arabia ; where, when the animals 
receive rich food, or are kept in pens and houses, the tail 
becomes of such large dimensions, that it trails upon the 
ground, so that it is frequently supported by little sledges to 
keep it from incommoding the animal. The Sheep having 
these broad fat tails are frequently designated the Syrian 
Breed, and are sometimes brought to England under the 
name of Turkish Sheep. Aristotle, Pliny, and others, refer 
to them; and there is reason to believe, from certain no- 
tices in the Levitical laws, that they were the kind of Sheep 
cultivated by the ancient Jews. They are a very valuable 
race in the countries which produce them. The large tail, 
weighing sometimes of itself 40 or 50 |b., is greatly valued, 
and the fat is used along with other food as butter or oil. 


The ewes are prolific, producing twice in the year, and yield- 
ing a larger quantity of milk than any other known race of 


Sheep. 

But towards the countries of the Caspian Sea, a remarkable 
deviation from this form occurs. The tail becomes short, or 
rudimental, and the fat accumulates on the haunches, form- 
ing two great cushions. This character is chiefly observed 
in the Sheep of the countries bordering on the Caspian, and 
the great saline lake of Aral, becoming less prominent as we . 
recede from the immense basin which contains these seas, 


HISTORY. 35 


and ultimately disappearing. It has been conjectured that 
the character itself arises from the Sheep feeding on the bit- 
_ ter and saline plants found in these countries; and itis said, 
that when they are removed from the places in which these 
plants grow, the fatty excrescence becomes less. It may 
justly be assumed, indeed, that this character is the result of 
peculiarities of food, although we cannot determine physiolo- 
gically in what manner the effect is produced. The Sheep 
in which this singular character appears have been regarded 
a8 a natural variety, and termed Steatopyga. 

The races of Sheep, again, having round tails covered with 
wool, are widely diffused over the Asiatic Continent. From 
this group of breeds the finest wool is produced, though, in 
the greater number of them, the wool is extremely coarse, 
and largely mixed with hairs. Some of them are of a large 
Size, as in Thibet, where they are employed for carrying bur- 
dens. The Sheep of the Tartars may be referred in part to | 
this group, and in part to the broad-tailed. The Tartar Sheep 
are remarkably strong and hardy, but, for the most part, of 
bad form, and covered with coarse wool. But when we speak . 
of Tartary, or rather Tahtary, it is to be remembered that 
We use a vague term for a region which comprehends a great 
Part of all Asia, and includes tribes and nations entirely 
distinct from one another in speech, customs, and country. 
The inhabitants, however, generally agree in this, that they 
are rude shepherds, subsisting on the produce of their flocks 
and herds, with which they migrate from place to place ; 
but their domesticated animals differ greatly with place, so 
that the Sheep of the Turcomans and other western Asiatics 
are distinct from those of the Kalmuks, Mantchoories, and 
others. Towards the Eastern Ocean, comprehending the 
fertile plains of China Proper, the Sheep, like the Horses of | : 
the same country, become of small size; and the same re- | 
mark applies to those which are found in the luxuriant Islands | 
of the Eastern Archipelago. Hindostan contains races more /} 
diversified in Size, form, and the character of the wool, than 


36 THE SHEEP. 


those of any other country of Asia of the same extent. The 
finest and largest are derived from Caubul and the other 
countries westward of the Indus; towards the more arid re- 
gions of the south the Sheep become of diminutive size, and 
are in many cases covered with short hair, with scarcely the 
; vestige of a fleece. Some of the Indian Sheep have very pe- 
culiar characters, as the Mysore Breed, the Piirek Breed, and 
_ others. 

Africa abounds in Sheep, as in Goats and all the ruminat- 
ing tribes. In the countries of the great Mediterranean 
basin, comprehending Barbary, from the Atlantic to the de- 
serts bordering on Egypt, the races are greatly varied. In 
many parts, chiefly in the Regency of Tunis, are found the 
Broad-tailed Syrian Sheep. Some are many-horned, having 
a coarse fleece. The more common Sheep of the Barbary 
States have-long limbs, ungainly forms, and shaggy hair. 
They have been termed by naturalists the Long-legged Breed 
of Africa, which, however, rather indicates a character than 
a breed. They have a mixed fur, chiefly of hair ; but towards 
the great mountains inland are found races of Sheep entirely 
different, covered with a fine wool fitted for the most delicate 
fabrics of the loom. 

In Abyssinia and the countries of the Red Sea is found a 
race of Sheep differing entirely from any existing in Europe, 
and which, if we are to pay regard at all to external cha- 
racters in discriminating species, must be regarded as a dis- 
tinct species. These sheep are covered with short glossy 
~ hair, with scarcely the rudiment of a fleece. They have thick 
necks, with well-formed heads. The head, and part of the 
throat and neck, are.black, and the rest of the body is pure 
white, without any tendency to the rufous colour characteris- 
tie of our common Sheep. They have short or rudimental 
tails, and are destitute of horns; and the fat accumulates 
largely on the buttocks and inside of the thighs. This race is 
found in Arabia, and has been carried, by the countries of the - 


Euphrates, into Persia, whence it has been sometimes erro- 


HISTORY. 37 


neously termed the Persian Breed, though in no degree pro- 
per to Persia. These Sheep thrive on the withered herbage 
of the countries they inhabit, and where the Sheep of Europe 
would perish. They are found in Madagascar, and along the 
South-eastern coast of Africa, together with the broad-tailed 
breeds. | 
Of the races of the boundless countries of the interior of 
the African Continent we know scarcely any thing. Travel- . 
lers, indeed, speak of Sheep as being numerous in the 
countries they have traversed, but they give us no characters 
by which the races can be discriminated. But in the rich 
and pestilential countries of the Negroes of the western 
coasts, the Sheep are better known to us. They are in great 
numbers, and of characters as distinct from those of Asia 
and Europe as other quadrupeds of the same countries. 
They are covered with short hair without any wool, and have | 
tails like those of swine; and some of them have singular — 
enlargements on the cheek, throat, and sometimes on the 
forehead. They are familiar to the slave-traders, who carry 
them away as sea-stock, along with their human victims. 
In the milder countries southward to the extremity of the 
Continent, there are large flocks of Sheep reared by such of 
the nomadic tribes as their own endless wars and. the cruel 
avarice of European colonists have spared. The Hottentot 
Sheep are of slender forms, resembling foxes rather than , 
Sheep, and having long tails on which the fat accumulates. | 
They have been confounded with the broad-tailed Syrian 
race, from which they are distinct. They have been long 
available to the Indian voyagers as sea-stock; but they are 
of delicate constitution, and frequently perish with the first 
gales on quitting the Cape of Storms. Few of them, how- 
ever, now exist in the pure state in the territory of the Cape, 
& mixed race having been formed by the Dutch and English 
colonists. . 
Turning to Europe, we find the Sheep varying in every 
country, and, like the human inhabitants, exhibiting the most 


38 THE SHEEP. 


marked traces of a mixed descent. It has been questioned 
whether the pristine inhabitants of Europe possessed the 
domestic Sheep, and did not, like the wild tribes of the North 
American forests, live solely by the spoils of the chase. We 
cannot resolve this question, because we do not know who 
were the pristine inhabitants of Europe. But we have reason 
to believe, that the early Celtic and Teutonic nations were in 
possession of Sheep, which, indeed, they could hardly have 
failed to bring with them in their migrations westward,—the 
Teutons from the countries north of the Black Sea and the 
Caspian, and the Celts from those other regions of the Hast 
where the Sheep had been cultivated from the first ages. 
Yet the greater part of Europe was long a great forest, un- 
favourable to the cultivation of Sheep; and they are rarely 
mentioned by early chroniclers. It is a mistake, however, 
to contend, as some have done, that Sheep did not find their 
way into Western Europe until about the Christian era. 
Indisputable proofs to the contrary exist, as in Spain, which 
| was long before this era inhabited by Sheep, and even in 
‘North Britain, where the remnants of the Celtic Sheep are 
_ still to be found, and where the early language of the people 
' ghews their familiarity with these animals. In the south of 
Europe, we may suppose that the Sheep of Asia were added 
to those of the pre-existing races. They may be believed 
to have found their way into Greece by the Hellespont, with 
the introduction of civilization and letters. The Sheep of 
Arcadia became at length the boast of Greece ; and innumer- 
able allusions in the writings of her poets, historians, and 
philosophers, shew us in what estimation this gift of the Gods 
was held. Italy likewise possessed her Sheep from an un- 
known period ; but the inhabitants, even up to a period com- 
paratively recent, seem to have directed their attention to the 
Goat more than to the Sheep. Long after Rome was founded, 
the inhabitants had not learned to shear the fleece; and, 
until the time of Pliny, the practice of plucking it from the 
skin was not wholly abandoned, so long had the humble shep- 


HISTORY. 39 


herds of Syria preceded, in their knowledge of necessary arts, 
the future conquerors of their country. 


In the highest latitudes of Europe are found the short- : 
tailed Sheep of Northern Asia, which had even found their / 
way from Scandinavia to the most northerly of the British } 


Islands, where they still exist. In certain countries, too, of 
the north of Europe, are found Polycerate Sheep; but the 
greater part of the Sheep of Europe are of the common long- 
tailed varieties, though manifestly derived from different 
Sources. For the most part, the Sheep of the richer eountries 
are larger than those of the poorer ; but this is not without 


exception, since, in fertile countries, are found races of Sheep, / 
which, amidst the most abundant herbage, remain diminutive ~ 


in size. 
In European Turkey and Greece, the Sheep do not now 


correspond with their ancient fame. They are of small size — 


and indifferent form. They are often of the broad-tailed race 


of Asia Minor ; and some of them have the horns twisted like | 
certain Antelopes, forming the race designated Sérepsiceros, — 


and sometimes termed the Cretan breed. In the Islands of 
the Archipelago few Sheep are reared. Some of them are of 
the Cretan, some of the Syrian breed, and some of them are 
polycerate. > 
Ascending the Danube, the Sheep are-found to be of the 
long-tailed varieties, with more or less of the characters of 
the Cretan race. The breed of Wallachia may be regarded 
as the type of the races which extend through Moldavia, 
Transylvania, and westwards towards Vienna. They have 
black faces, and long wiry wool, much mixed with hair. 
Ttaly, once so renowned for her Sheep, can now boast 
little of this production of her bounteous clime. The Ro- 
mans, whose dress was woollen, cultivated in an especial 
degree the fineness of the fleece; and it was not until the 
days of the Empire that the silk and cotton of the East be- 
gan to supersede the ancient raiment of the Roman people. 
The finest wools of ancient Italy were produced in Apulia 


40 : THE SHEEP. 


and Calabria, being the eastern parts of the present kingdom 
of Naples. Pliny informs us that the best wool was that of 
Apulia, on the Adriatic Sea ; that the next best was further 
to the south, on the Gulf of Tarentum; that the Milesian or 
Asiatic Sheep carried the third prize; and that, for white- 
ness, there was none better than that produced on the Po. 
The care of the Romans in causing the wool to grow fine, 
exceeded, in the case of certain breeds, any thing that is 
now attempted. The sheep were kept in houses, and con- 
tinually elothed, so that the filaments of the wool might be- 
come delicate : the skin was smeared with fine oil, and mois- 
tened with wine; the fleece was combed, so that the wool 
might not become matted ; and the whole was washed seve- 
ral times in the year. Under this artificial treatment the 
breed became tender, subject to diseases, voracious of food, 
and the females so incapable of nourishing their young, 
that many of the lambs were obliged to be destroyed. The 
Apulian and Tarentine breeds probably ceased to exist even 
before the fall of the Empire, or were swept away by barbar- 
ous conquerors, with all the arts of the lovely land. There 
are still in Italy many fine-woolled Sheep, but of small bad 
form, and ruined by neglect. The same remark applies to 
the Sheep of Sicily, which were greatly celebrated for the 
fineness of their wool, and which have not yet lost this an- 
cient character. : 

Of all the countries of Europe, Spain has been the longest 
distinguished for its Sheep. This fine country, more varied 
in its surface and natural productions than any other region 
of the like extent in Europe, produces a great variety of 
breeds, from the larger animals of the richer plains, to the 
smaller races of the higher mountains and arid country. 
Besides the difference produced in the Sheep of Spain by 
varieties of climate and natural productions, the diversity of 
character in the animals may be supposed to have been in- 
creased by the different races introduced into it, 1s¢, from 
Asia, by the early Phoenician colonies ; 2d, from Africa, by 


Fe 


WOOL. 41 


the Carthaginians, during their brief possession ; 3d, from 
Italy, by the Romans, during their dominion of several hun- 
dred years ; and 4¢h, again from Africa, by the Moors, who 
maintained a footing in the country for nearly eight centuries. 
The larger Sheep of the plains have long wool, often coloured 
brown or black. The Sheep of the mountains, downs, and 
arid plains, have short wool, of different degrees of fineness, 
and different colours. The most important of these latter 
races is the Merino, now the most esteemed and widely dif- 
fused of all the fine-woolled breeds of Europe. 

In the British Islands the races of Sheep present extraor- 
dinary diversities of size, form, and other characters, caused, 
it may be believed, in part, by a difference of descent, in part 
by the long-continued influence of climate, food, and other 
agencies, and in part by the effects of breeding and artificial 
treatment. But before describing the breeds proper to, or 
naturalized in, these Islands, it will be well to direct atten- 
_tion to the nature of Wool, which forms an important pro- 
duction of the Sheep in all countries. | 


WOOL. 


The Hair of animals, of which Wool is a variety, springs 
from the cellular tissue, immediately underneath the corion 
or true skin. It grows from a soft pulp included in a little 
sac, into which nerves and bloodvessels pass from the sur- 
rounding tissue. It extends outwards, passing through the 
true skin and epidermis in the form of a fine cylinder. It pos- 
sesses externally a scaly texture, the laminz pointing in one 
direction from the root to the tip, and is protected by an 
unctuous secretion. Wool is chiefly distinguished from hair 
by its growing in a spiral form, by its greater softness and 
pliability, and by a property to be referred to, by which the 
Separate filaments adhere under the influence of moisture 
and pressure. On account of these properties, wool is 


42 THE SHEEP. 


greatly better suited than hair for being spun and woven 
into cloth. : 

_ Hair is often largely mixed with the wool of Sheep, and, 
in the wilder races, forms the principal part of the animal's 
covering. By frequent shearing of the fleece, the hair di- 
minishes in quantity, and the wool is proportionally de- 
veloped, until at length, under the influence of continued 
domestication, the essential covering of the animal becomes 
wool, of greater or less tenuity and softness. In the culti- 
vated Sheep of England, hair covers only the face and part 
of the limbs, but often hairs are mixed with the wool of 
other parts of the body; and this, as it regards the manu- 
facture, is an imperfection, and it is a process of art to 
Separate the intermixed hairs from the wool. 

Generally speaking, the wool of Sheep in these latitudes 
is yearly renewed, the older part falling off at the com- 
mencement of the warmer season, and it is then that we 
anticipate the process of nature by shearing the fleece. But 
the wool may be shorn at any time, and, like hair, will grow 
again. In this country, however, it is never thought bene- 
ficial to shear the wool more than once in the year, and this 
at the commencement of the warmer season, when the older 
portion is about to fall off. In certain parts of this country, 
favourable with respect to the mildness of the climate, the 
wool of lambs is shorn; but the practice is unsuited to a 
cold climate, and is only, therefore, very partially pursued. 
The wool of lambs employed in the manufactures of this 
country is chiefly derived from the skins of animals that 
have been killed for the butcher, though largely, also, from 
the importation of the skins of lambs with the wool from 
other countries. 

The wool of different races or families of Sheep is greatly 

distinguished by the length of the staple and the tenuity and 
softness of the filaments. And not only does the wool of 
different Sheep differ in these properties, but the wool of 
the same individual is more or less soft and fine, according 


WOOL. 43 


to the parts of the body from which it is derived. In gene- 
ral, the wool becomes less fine, proceeding from the neck 
towards the extremities, so that the wool on the breech is 
more coarse than that on the back and sides. It is a pro- 
cess of art to separate the finer from the coarser parts in an 
individual fleece, and this into such number of divisions as 
Suits the nature of the wool, or the manufacture intended. 
The number of these divisions varies from six to ten, or, in 
many cases, to a greater number. The fleece being un- 
rolled, the workman at his table, with a clear light thrown 
upon him, and guided by the eye and touch, culls out the 
several locks, as distinguished by the fineness of the fila- 


ments. These being put into baskets placed around him, 


are afterwards collected into distinct packages ; and thus the 
manufacturer is supplied with wool of the peculiar quality 
required. This operation is sometimes performed under the 
direction of the manufacturers themselves, but more com- 
monly by a class of persons termed wool-staplers, who pur- 
chase the raw material from the grower, and dispose of it 
after being assorted to the manufacturer. The operative 
part of the process is one of great nicety, to which men are 
trained, as to the other mechanical arts, by a regular ap- 
prenticeship.* ‘ 

Wool is eminently suited to the reception of colours by 
the dyeing process, excelling in this respect silk, and much 
more cotton, and all other vegetable substances. White 
wool receives the colouring matter more readily than black, 
the finer parts of the fleece more readily than the coarser, 
and the wool of healthy Sheep more readily than that of 


those which are unhealthy. The natural colour of wool is- 


often black, and black filaments are frequently mixed with 
the white. The intermixture is regarded as a great defect, 
the black filaments being unsuited for the reception of the 
brighter and more delicate colours in dyeing. The inter- 
mixture of black wool with white is most apt to take place 


* Remarks by the Author on Wool, aliunde. 


— oop treme re at re pr Somme So ana A 
Fo RPE ACCA REY PI ETON REPT SF ve sciiilairbetanee =-—oneeaeaipncestinaiaeninet oe aalaeane Se RN NAR 


en 


44 THE SHEEP. 


in the case of the breeds of Sheep whose legs and faces are 
covered with dark hair. 

The kinds of wool, as distinguished from one another by 
the length of the staple, are termed Long and Short. In this 
country the long wools are the produce of the larger Sheep of 
the plains, and possess a staple of seven inches and upwards. 
The short wools are the produce of the smaller Sheep of the 
mountains, downs, and generally of the drier or less fertile 
country, and have wool of a staple from two to four inches. 

Wool is prepared for being spun into thread by two pro- 
cesses entirely different in the effect and mode of execution: 
the first is termed Combing, and prepares the wool for being 
spun into worsted yarn, which is the kind of thread employed 
for the stuffs called worsteds ; the second is termed Carding, 
and prepares the material for being spun into woollen yarn, 
which is the kind of thread suited for the manufacture of 
woollen cloths. 

In combing, the process consists in dividing the wool by 
means of fine steel teeth, acting in the manner of the com- 
mon comb on knotted or entangled hair. The comb is kept 
hot, and the wool is oiled, in order that it may pass more 
easily between the teeth of the comb. In this manner, the 
filaments are smoothed and arranged side by side, some- 
what in the manner in which the fibres of hemp and flax are 
assorted for spinning, and being then drawn out to the de- 
gree of tenuity required, are twisted or spun, forming worsted 
yarn. The tenuity given to these threads is of every degree, 
suited to the various kinds of manufacture, from the thickest 
and stoutest. substances, to the most delicate articles of 
clothing and dress. The fineness to which woollen threads 
can be spun almost exceeds belief. It has been computed 
that, in ordinary spinning at Norwich, a pound of wool may 
be extended to 13,440 yards, or in superfine spinning, to 
37,200 yards, or about 22} miles, so that a fleece yielding 
7 lb. would produce a thread of 155 miles in length: and 
even this degree of fineness can be exceeded. The exporta~ 


need 


WOOL. : 45 


tion of worsted yarn was formerly prohibited by law; it is 
now permitted, and forms an increasing and profitable branch 
of trade. % 

The preparation of wool by carding, for the manufacture 
of woollen cloth, is performed in an entirely different manner. 
In this process, the filaments are not kept entire and laid 
parallel to one another in the direction of the thread to be 
spun ; but they are torn and broken into innumerable minute 


‘fragments, and then mingled together in every direction. By 


the spiral growth of wool, as distingushed from that of hair, 
each filament, or portion of a filament, is curled at its ex- 
tremity, and the broken or divided parts tend to hook them- 
selves to one another, so that, when a portion of wool is 
forcibly broken into pieces, the fragments remain loosely 
adherent, and may then be twisted or spun. The operation 
of breaking the wool by means of the card is performed by 
machinery ; but the principle of the process will be under- 
stood from the following explanation :— 

Let there be supposed to be a board with a handle attached, 
and that in this board is fixed a great number of crooked 
wires, all bent in one direction. These wires are then par- 
tially filled with wool. Another board with the same kind of 
wires or teeth is then pulled in such a manner as that its 
teeth shall pass through amongst those of the other board. 
By the repeated action of these two cards, the wool is broken 
into minute fragments, which, from the curling property of 
the wool referred to, hook themselves together, and are 
formed into long rolls or cardings, which, being drawn out 
and twisted, form the thread. 

This peculiar mode of forming the thread of woollen yarn 
has relation to the kind of fabric to be formed, namely, 
woollen cloth, which is a substance of a dense and close tex- 
ture; while the fabrics formed of worsted thread are of a 
lighter and looser texture. The denser consistence is given 
to the woollen cloth by means of the property termed Felting. 

The property of felting consists in a tendency of the fila- 


“_eeamrcien 


an 


ae 


46 THE SHEEP. 


ments of wool to unite or adhere when moistened and com- 
pressed. By compression in the moist state, a mass of wool 
becomes a dense body, as we see in the case of hats or beavers, 
which are formed of the wool’ and down of animals subjected 
to pressure and moisture. Nay, by this process alone, with- 
out the intervention of spinning or weaving, cloth can be 
formed. Thus, in ancient times, and among certain people of 
the East at the present day, caps, mantles, blankets, car pets, 
and the covering of tents, are formed by felting alone. In 
England, recent experiments have shewn, that tolerably good 
cloths, both with respect to durability and fineness, may be 
formed by this means. The property appears to depend on 
the form of the filaments before referred to. Each filament 
is seen to be notched all round with minute serrations, formed 
by fine sharp laminee, proceeding from the pile like the leaves 
of an artichoke, all pointing in one direction from the base 
to the extremity. Now when, by the process of carding, the 
filaments are broken into minute fragments, the parts are in- 
termingled in every direction, and the serrations tend to lock 
themselves into one another by meeting in opposite direc- 
tions. But when wool is prepared by combing, the serrations 
lie in one direction, and do not in the same degree tend to 
lock themselves together. 

In the manufacture of woollen cloth, the felting process is 
_ not called into operation until the. threads are spun and 
woven, and in the preparatory process the tendency of the 
filaments to cohere is prevented by oiling the wool. But 
when the cloth is woven, it is subjected to a process termed 
Fulling, for the purpose of freeing it from the oily matter. 
The fulling is performed by machinery, and consisty in press- 
ing the cloth in water along with clay, the aluminous matter 
of which combines with the oil of the cloth: It is in under- 
going this operation that the threads and filaments cohere 
together, so that the cloth becomes more thick, and does not 
unravel when cut. 

From this account, it will be seen that, while the facility 


WOOL. | | 47 


of felting is an important property in the case of all wool 
designed for the manufacture of cloth, and prepared by the 
card, it is not required in the case of wool intended for 
worsted, and prepared by the comb. Certain kinds of wool 
have this property in a higher degree than others, and are 
consequently better adapted for the making of woollen cloth. 
In general, the shorter kinds of wool having also fine fila- 


ments, are those of which the lamine are most numerous © 


and distinct, and are those accordingly in which the felting 
property is the greatest. The property, however, is not in 
proportion to the tenuity of the fibres, since certain short 
and slender wools possess it in an inferior degree. Of all 
known wools, that derived from the Merino race possesses 
the felting property in the greatest perfection, and is accord- 
ingly the best adapted of all others for the making of cloth ; 
while the long and tough wool of the larger sheep is imper- 
fectly adapted to the preparation of woollen yarn, and ac- 
cordingly is never prepared by the action of the card. It is, 
therefore, the short and felting wools which alone are fitted 
for this process ; and until a period comparatively recent, they 
were, with few exceptions in this country, never prepared by 
any other means. This gave rise to a popular distinction, 
long in use, and not yet entirely abandoned. The long wools 
were termed Combing wools; the short, Carding wools. But 
these designations are no longer applicable. By improve- 
ments in the woollen manufacture, the means have been 
found to prepare the shorter and more delicate wools by the 
comb as well as by the card; and now a great proportion of 
all the short wool of this country is converted into worsted 


yarn. The South Down wool, which was formerly, and until - 


a recent period exclusively, prepared by the card, is now in 
a still larger degree prepared by the comb for the manufac- 
ture of worsted. It has fallen in price, indeed, from its being 
no longer used for the finer cloths, but the range of its utility 
has been greatly extended. Thus it is also with the wool of 
the Cheviot, the Norfolk, and other Short-woolled breeds ; 


fon nn sa apt SS I MATT CPR eS 
Peal aw 9A PNET AMMA ITE Dar piecemeal 


a3... THE SHEEP. 


and there cannot be a doubt, that, although individual in- 
terests may haye been injuriously affected by the fall in the 
price, the nation has been benefited by an extension of the 
purposes to which this class of wools can be applied. Nay, 
the general good of the wool-growers themselves has been 
eminently served. The demand for their commodity has be- 
come more steady, and the trade been placed on a surer basis, 
by being founded on an enlarged demand, and supported, not 
by artificial regulations and fiscal restraints, but by an exten- 
sion of the woollen manufacture. Soon after the peace of 
1814, alarm was raised among the British wool-growers lest 
the price of the raw material should be reduced below what 
they chose to term a remunerating price. The Government 
of the day, in an evil hour, yielded to the influence exerted ; 
and in the year 1819, heavy duties were imposed on foreign 
wool, with the design of keeping up the price of the native pro- 
_ duce, under the specious pretext of encouraging British agri- 
culture. In six years this’ monstrous law was repealed, but 
not until it had done all that the shortness of the time allowed 
for establishing the manufactures of foreign rivals, and giv- 
ing them the ascendency in the markets of Europe. But the 
price of short wool continuing to decline, renewed efforts were 
made by the wool-growers to induce the Legislature to re- 
store the former restrictions. This, in 1828, led to a parlia- 
mentary inquiry, when a mass of evidence was produced, 
proving beyond all cavil the danger and evil of interfering, 
through the medium of duties and fiscal regulations, with the 
raw material of a manufacture which could only be sustained 
by freedom of trade and production. It was proved by the con- 
current testimony of witnesses from all parts, that the cloth 
made from British wool alone could no longer find a market 
in Europe, and was even deemed too coarse for the clothing 
of the labouring classes at home; and that, without a free 
command of the wool of other countries, a great part of the 
woollen export trade of Great Britain would be for ever lost. 

It may well excite surprise that any class of men amongst 

“ 


WOOL. 49 


us should have dared to demand that the manufacturers of 


the country should be prevented from procuring the materials 
of their manufacture where they could be obtained cheapest 


and best; nay, should not only be prevented from exercising — 


this natural and necessary right, but compelled to take from 
the wool-growers at home, and at a price enhanced by fiscal 
regulations, what was absolutely unsuited for the purposes 


of commerce. The disgraceful law of 1819 had already: 


Shewn, that, by refusing to take the wools of other countries, 
we depressed the price of the raw material abroad, and thus 
gave an indirect premium to the foreign manufacturer; and 
that, by forcing our manufacturers to employ wools of inferior 
quality and higher price, we directly unfitted them for com- 


petition in the general market of the world. It was of the © 


repeal of the law of 1819 that the wool-growers thought fit 
to complain, as having produced the depreciation which had 
taken place in the price of the clothing wools, not perceiving 
that, in admitting the depreciation from this cause, they ad- 
mitted at the same time the magnitude and injustice of a 
burden, which had been so heavily taxing the manufacturing 
industry of our own country, and fostering that of others. 
What, it may be well asked, did the wool-growers hope for 
by forcing up the price of wool by such expedients? To the 
mere occupier of the land a forced rise of the raw material 
could only be beneficial during a passing term. On the ter- 
mination of the lease, the benefit would go to the owner of 
the land in the shape of increased rent. Thus, in order to 
raise the rent of the land, the wool-growers were prepared to 


lay a tax on every consumer of wool, that is, on every indi- - 


vidual in the kingdom, and to cripple the trader in his means 
to maintain his equality in the foreign markets. Itis known 
that, in these times, the great danger to the manufacturing 
prosperity of the country is the progress of other nations in 
those arts‘in which we have hitherto excelled, and that our 
relative superiority in such arts can only be maintained by 
our being enabled to supply the productions of them on the 
D 


Seis ‘THE SHEEP. 


cheapest terms; and granting that the wool-growers could, 
by means of an ill-judged monopoly, have forced up for a time 
the price of the native wool, would they not thereby have 
abandoned a yet more safe and permanent means of effecting 
the end, namely, that which would have resulted from in- 
creasing the demand for the manufactured commodity? The 
injurious measure contended for was, however, happily re- 
sisted, never, it is to be trusted, to be brought forward again ; 
and the trade of wool, by being thrown open to the world, 
has been placed on a far surer foundation than if it had been 
made to rest on the narrow and insecure basis of monopoly 
and restriction.* 

The woollen trade of England has been cherished by the 
laws from early times, and has long been regarded as a main 
branch of the industry of the country. The Romans extended 
and perfected the arts of spinning and weaving in Britain, as 
in other of their provinces, and taught the natives to clothe 
themselves after the Roman fashion. They established fac- 
tories, of which that at Winchester was long distinguished. 
But the garments and woollen fabrics of the people were for 
the most part spun and woven by themselves, under that 
system of domestic manufacture which is the first in order of 
time in all rude countries. The employment of spinning and 
weaving was chiefly devolved on females, whence the term 
Spinster, which has been in use from time immemorial. Ed- 
ward the Elder, who died in the year of our Lord 925, mar- 
ried, we are told, the daughter of a shepherd or countryman 
of mean rank; and being desirous that his children should 
- have a princely education, “ he sette his sons to scole, and 
his daughters he sette to woll werke, takyne example of 
Charles the Conquestour.” t 

In the succeeding times of the Norman princes, the state 
of the woollen trade is made known to us by the records of 
customs, Subsidies, fines, and fiscal regulations. Wool formed 


* Remarks on Wool, aliunde, by the Author. ; + Fabian’s Chron. 


WOOL. 51 


the chief revenue of the prince, and the subject of continued 
_ exaction on the people. Sometimes the woollen subsidies 
were paid in kind, but more generally in heavy duties laid 
upon the sale or exportation of the wool. In these early 
times the raw, material alone was exported. It was carried 
chiefly to the Low Countries, where it was manufactured into 
cloths and worsted stuffs by the Flemings, then become the 
great weavers of Northern Europe. These industrious people 
maintained their superiority in the woollen manufacture for 
many ages, and during this period acquired that wealth which 
enabled them to render their country the most populous and 
fruitful in Europe. Their chief dependence for the raw mate- 
rial was on England, which alone could supply them in the 
due quantity with the wool which their innumerable looms 
required. They returned the manufactured commodity ata — - 
high price; and yet the trade was mutually beneficial, and 
calculated to advance the industry of the ruder, as well as the 
more cultivated, people. But Edward III., soon after his ac- 
cession to the crown, resolved to wrest the woollen manufac- 
ture as much as possible from the Flemings, and establish it 
at home. He encouraged the resort of foreign artisans to 
England; and, availing himself of certain discontents in 
Flanders, he invited over weavers, dyers, fullers, and others, 
and established them in different parts, affording them pro- 
tection and privileges. He caused it to be enacted, that all 
merchant strangers and denizens might buy and sell within 
the realm, freely and without interruption, and that all foreign 
clothmakers should be received from whatever foreign parts 
they came. To encourage the home manufacture, he even 
resolved to prevent the exportation of English wool, and the 
importation of foreign cloths. Ata parliament held in March 
1337, it was enacted that no wool of English growth should 
be transported beyond sea, and that none should wear any 
cloths made beyond sea. But this statute soon gave way to 
the exigencies of the exchequer, and the temptation of im- 
posts, licenses, and fines. ed 


a eS SS SSeS 


ee OE 


52 THE SHEEP. 


This prince has been regarded as the great founder of the 
manufacturing prosperity of England,—with what justice, let 
the records of his exchequer, and the complaints of his harassed 
subjects, declare. He bestowed his favour upon the woollen 
trade, it is true, but merely as an engine for extorting money ; 
and in no previous reign had the exactions on this part of the 
industry of the country been more grievous. We are amazed 
at the sums he drew from forced subsidies, customs, fines, 
and otherwise. On one occasion having, without the sanction 
of Parliament, and contrary, accordingly, to Magna Charta, 
laid a heavy impost on all wool sold within the kingdom, the 
Commons agree to give him 30,000 sacks of wool for his re- 
lief, on condition that he should keep to the customs ordained 
by law ; and the Lords, after humbly praying “ that the great 
wrong set upon wool be revoked,” offer him in return the 
tenth sheaf of all the corn of their demesnes, and the tenth 
fleece of wool, and the tenth lamb of their own stores, to be 
paid within two years. The clergy sometimes assisted him, 
as, on one occasion, by raising for him 20,000 sacks. When 
these woollen subsidies were to be levied, care likewise was 
used that the king’s market was not interfered with. Pro- 
clamation was sometimes made, “ that no person buy any 
wools before the king be served, whereunto all customers 
shall have an eye.”* On one occasion, the king having re- 
solved to export 20,000 sacks on his own account, his ready 
Parliament enacted that no man before that time should pass 
over any wool on pain of treble loss, life and member! 

Such was the protection afforded to the woollen trade on 


the part of our earlier governments. By the increasing power 
of the people, the exactions of the prince were better resisted 
in the following reigns ; but yet we recognise little of just and 
liberal principles in the legislation of the times. Guilds and . 
corporations. with exclusive privileges were multiplied, and 
thus monopoly crept into all the departments of the woollen 


* Smith’s Memoirs of Wool. 


WOOL. 5S 


trade; foreigners were treated with jealousy and injustice ; 
and restrictions were extended to every branch of the manu- 


facture. Still, the woollen manufactures of the country con- . 


tinued to extend ; but it was not until the more settled times 


of Henry VII. that cloth began to be exported in any quan- . | 


tity. But how little of this advancement was due to the Wis-_ 
dom of the laws, may be seen from the statutes which were 
before and afterwards enacted. Certain towns and districts 
were frequently allowed the exclusive privilege of manufac- 
“turing and selling certain kinds of goods. An act of Henry 
VIII. declares, that worsted yarn is the “ private commoditie” 
of the city of Norwich, and county of Norfolk; and therefore 
enacts “ that none shall be transported, nor shipped to be 
transported, nor bought, nor caused to be bought, by any but 
weavers in the said city or county.” Another act recites, 
that “ the city of York afore this time hath been upholden 
principally by making and weaving coverlets, and that the 
same have not been made elsewhere in the said county till of 
late, and that this manufacture had spread itself into other 
parts of the county, and was thereby debased and discredited ;” 


and therefore ordains, “ That none shall make coverlets in — 


Yorkshire but inhabitants of the city of York.” An act of 
the same prince revives certain older laws against enclosures, 
and another limits the number of Sheep which any one shall 
keep, on account, it is stated, of the rise in the price of 


victual and clothing. By an act of William and Mary, it is’ 


ordained that no clothier out of a burgh, market town, or 
corporate town, shall have above one loom; that no weaver 
dwelling out of a city shall have above two looms; that no 
weaver shall be either tucker, fuller, or dyer; that no fuller 
or tucker shall keep a loom; that no person shall cause any 
white broad woollen cloths to be made but in a city, or where 
such cloths have been made for the space of ten years before ; 
that no weaver dwelling out of a city shall have above two 
apprentices at one time; and that none shall set up weaving 
unless he have been apprentice to, or have exercised the 


54 THE SHEEP. 


same, for seven years, and so forth. Absurd as are these, 
and many more of the laws of the times, the woollen trade 
and manufacture had been continually extending; and, in 
the glorious reign of Elizabeth, became one of the main 
sources of national opulence and power. - 

With the progressive increase, during the preceding reigns, 
of the foreign export trade in manufactured goods, the ex- 
portation of raw wool had been gradually declining, and 
became continually less a means of supplying the wants of 
needy princes. Elizabeth, with a provident sagacity, did not* 
prohibit the exportation of the raw material; and thus, while 
she supported the manufacturer, she encouraged the growth of 
native wool, by suffering the growers to send their produce 
to the most suitable market. This wise policy had a happy 
effect ; while events arose, in connexion with the melancholy 
history of other countries, which gave a new vigour to the 
manufacturing industry of England. 

Charles V. had succeeded, together with his other fair 
dominions, to the sovereignty of the Low Countries, then 
including the Dutch provinces. The doctrines of the Refor- 
mation, so well suited to the genius of a frugal and calcu- 
lating people, had early made a silent progress in the coun- 
try; but here, as elsewhere, the strength of authority was 
put forth to repress the spreading heresy. Civil grievances 
were added to religious quarrels. Charles lived to witness 
‘and deplore the growing discontent of his once faithful people; 
but it was reserved for his son and successor Philip II. to fan 
the embers of rebellion into flame, and complete the ruin of 
his rich and peaceful provinces. The people, who had been 
termed in contempt Geux, or beggars, by the minions of the 
Court, assumed, with bitter irony, the wallet and the staff as 
the ensign of their confederacy, and everywhere made head 
against their oppressors.- A civil war ensued, rendered hor- 
rible by the merciless severity with which it was carried on ; 
by the sacking of rich towns, and other excesses of merce- 
nary soldiers; by confiscations and judicial murders. After 


WOOL. | 5B. 


a time, ten of the provinces remained subjugated, but seven 
achieved their independence, and became, under the name of 
the Seven United Provinces, or Republic of Holland, one of 
the most powerful nations of Europe. On the death of Philip, 
in 1598, the subdued provinces enjoyed a kind of repose ; but 
the commerce that made them powerful was gone, and all 
their arts were in a state of decay. During forty years of 
war and misrule, multitudes of artisans had migrated with 
their families to other countries, and in an especial degree to 
England, where they were received with sympathy and fa- 
vour. It is supposed that about 50,000 of these unfortunate 
refugees found shelter in England soon after the first inva- 
sion of the barbarous Duke of Alva. They were settled in 
all parts of the kingdom, and contributed to give that perfec- 
tion to the English manufactures, particularly of the finer 
stuffs, in which they were formerly deficient. This, in con- 
nexion with the growing commerce of the country, extended 
the woollen trade of England to every part of the world, and 
made it be regarded as the most important department of 
national industry. The illustrious De Witt, in lamenting 


the destruction of the woollen manufacture of the Nether- 
lands, first by injurious laws at home, and then by the cruelty 
of the Duke of Alva, observes, that afterwards “ The English 
by degrees began to vend their manufactures throughout 
Europe, and then they became potent at sea; and he who is 
powerful at sea is a lord at land, and more especially a king 
of England.—” . 

During the reigns of the princes of the House of Stuart, 
the woollen trade continued in a languishing condition. The 
commercial legislation of this period, with respect to wool, . 
was marked by the spirit of monopoly and exclusiveness, a 
short-sighted regard to little interests, a petty intermeddling 
with the details of trade, and a jealousy of particular classes, 
interests, and countries. The Dutch, then becoming a ma-_ 
nufacturing as well as a trading people, were the subjects of 
especial jealousy and dislike. They had become the princi- 


a a a aN mn Vane 8 en = nae ee ee EE 


56 THE SHEEP. 


pal dyers of Europe. King James L., in the plenitude of his 


wisdom, resolved to take the process of dyeing into his’ own 
hands. He gave exclusive patents to persons at home to 
perform it, and ordained that no cloth but that dyed in Eng- 
land should be exported. The Dutch and Germans retaliated, 
and refused to take cloth dyed in England. But jealousy 


‘was not confined to aliens. The woollen manufacture had 


taken root, and was making progress in the sister Island, 
when addresses were presented to the King and both Houses 
of Parliament, “ beseeching his Majesty to take effectual 
measures to prevent the growth of the woollen manufactures 


in Ireland.” The exportation of Irish wool to any country 
but England was rendered a felony; and the importation of 
manufactured goods into England itself was prevented by 


restrictions equivalent to a prohibition. The exportation, 
even, of our English wool, was rigidly prohibited; and the 
protection given to stranger artisans was so counteracted 
by the miserable laws of corporations, that numbers of the 
former refugees quitted the country in disgust. 

During the reigns of Queen Anne and the two first gove- 
reigns of the House of Hanover, the home consumption of 
woollen goods greatly increased, but the foreign woollen 
trade remained nearly stationary. During the first part of 
the reign of George IIL, it progressively extended, but yet 
not to a degree corresponding with the increasing wealth of 
the country. The chief demand was for the West India 
Islands and the North American Colonies. After the year 
17738, a revolution occurred in manufacturing industry, which 
may be said to have changed the condition of human society. 
Machinery was applied to the fabrication of cotton, and the 
stupendous power of steam was called into more extended 
action. First came the Spinning-jenny, by which a child 
could direct a hundred spindles and more, all at a time ; then 
the beautiful Frame of Arkwright, which required merely 
that the raw material should be supplied, in order to be spun 
into threads of surpassing fineness; then the Mule-jenny ; 


- WOOL. ay 


and last the Power-loom, which substituted mechanical for hu- 
man power in the forming of the cloth. A similar machinery 
was applied to the spinning and weaving of wool, and the 
whole processes of the art were changed. The variety, qua- 
lity, and cheapness of the productions increased in a won- 
derful degree; and, notwithstanding the amazing extension 
of the use of cotton in furniture, clothing, and dress, the con- 
sumption of wool in England has not only not diminished, 
but is at this time greater than in any former age. — 

The number of Sheep in the British Islands has been va- 
riously computed at from thirty to thirty-five millions. Tak- 
ing the latter sum, which probably falls below the real 
amount, and assuming the produce, after making allowance 
for the deficient weight of the wool of slaughtered sheep and 

“lambs, to be 43 lb. the aie the total quantity produced 


will be : : oussee ; ; 157,500,000 Ib. 
Whereof are exported in the raw state, 4,603,799 
Leaving to be manufactured, Toe ae dt Ib. 


And assuming the price to be 1s. 3d. per lb., 

the value of the raw material will be L.9,556,012 11 3 
| The value of foreign wool imported, if 
56,700,895 lb. at 2s. 6d., is : , SET TOST CLI TFS 


| L.16,643,624 8 9 


Supposing, then, the value of the manufactured commo- 
dity to be 23 times that of the raw material, the value of 
manufactured woollen goods produced in Britain will be 
L.41,609,061 :1: 10. - 

This great national manufacture supplies a larger internal 
consumption than takes place in any other country; and affords 
a surplus, valued at between six and seven millions sterling, 
besides yarn, valued at about half a million, for an export 
trade to all parts of the world, being more than one-eighth 


- 58 THE SHEEP, 


part of the whole export trade of the kingdom. The woollen 
trade is, therefore, of surpassing importance to the nation. 
It has to contend with the fiscal regulations, and the increas- 
ing production and rivalry of other countries; but hitherto 


the superior capital, machinery, and industry of the country, 
and the facilities of an extended commerce, have given advan- 
tages to the British manufacturer which no European coun- 
try as yet possesses. 

This brief account of the nature and properties of wool, 
will prepare us for considering the characters of the various 
breeds of Sheep which have been naturalized in these Islands. 


I. THE BREEDS OF THE ZETLAND AND ORKNEY 
ISLANDS. 


The Sheep of this race inhabit the group of Islands and 
Islets which lie to the north of the Pentland Firth, extending 
to about the sixty-first degree of north latitude. They have 
been in numerous cases intermixed with Dutch Sheep, brought 
by the fishing-craft which frequent these northern seas, and 
likewise with the Sheep of the Main. They thus differ in 
some degree in the different islands, and even in different 
flocks of the same island ; but they have manifestly a common 
origin with the Sheep of Nitwhy and other parts of Northern 
Europe. 

These wild little Sheep are eee of a fur consisting 
partly of hair and partly of fine wool. They are of different 
colours, black, brown, or white ; and more often they are of 
a gray colour, from the mixture of black and white, and are 
often curiously streaked. There are horns in both sexes, but 
more generally they are wanting in the females, and some- 
times in the males. Their horns are short, and often so straight 
and upright, as to resemble those of the Goat. Their tails are 
short and broad, and their limbs slender, their aspect is 


wild, and their motions are active. 


BREEDS OF THE ZETLAND AND ORKNEY ISLANDS. 59 


These Sheep have acquired the characters which fit them 
for the condition in which they are placed. The country 
which they inhabit possesses a climate eminently cold and 
humid, and is exposed to continual gusts and storms. Scarce 
a tree is to be found, or a shrubby plant, beyond the heath 
which covers the soil. Many of the islets are little else than 
rocks, with a covering of peat, washed by the spray of the 
boisterous seas which surround them, and occupied only by a 
few Sheep left to find their own food. Under these circum- 
stances, the Sheep are small in size, but hardy, and capable 
of subsisting under great privations of food. The wethers 
may be fattened, on a medium, to 6 or 7 |b. the quarter. At 
certain seasons they find their way from the mountains to the 
shores, and feed on the fuci and other marine plants. It is 
remarkable to see them, on the receding of the tide, running 
down from the hills, as if possessing an instinctive knowledge 
of the time of ebb. They remain feeding while the sea allows ; 
and sometimes they are caught by the surrounding tide and 
drowned. Sometimes they are unable, from exhaustion, to 
ascerid again the cliffs of the coast, and so perish ; sometimes 
they are driven into coves, where they are imprisoned until 
the retiring tide permits them to escape. It is remarkable 
that these Sheep feed readily on animal substances. One of 
the greatest resources in some of the islands for keeping 
them, when no other provender exists, is fish, which are dried 
on the rocky shores for that purpose. These Sheep manifest, 
in their habits, the rudeness of their condition. The rams 
will often set upon the other sheep of the flock if wounded, 
and destroy ‘them. They will furiously attack the females 
and new-born lambs, as if, in the dreary circumscribed islets 
which they inhabit, they had acquired the instinct of endea- 
vouring to prevent the too great multiplication of their num- 
bers. ‘The ewes, conscious of the danger, make their escape 
at the time of lambing, that they may bring forth their young 
in secret. When brought to the richer countries, these wild 
creatures make every effort to escape from the enclosures 


60 THE SHEEP. 


which confine them, find their way to the nearest elevated 
grounds, and wander from place to place. They crop the tops 
of herbs in the manner of goats, and endeavour to reach the 
, branches of shrubs and trees. Their descendants, for more 
(| than one generation, retain the wild habits of the race. 

Of these Sheep, the least mixed with foreign blood are those 
of the remoter Islands, chiefly of Zetland. The Sheep of 
Orkney are of a more mixed descent, and the impure breeds 
have not the fineness of wool which distinguishes the ancient 
race. In these animals, the hair grows mixed with the wool 
all over the body. The wool falls off at the commencement 
of the warmer season, leaving the hair to protect the animal. 
Previous to the winter months, the wool has again grown, 
and, along with the hair, forms a thick fur, suited to afford a 
covering during the intense rigour of the colder season. The 
usual practice is to pluck off the wool, and not to shear it. 
This practice has been described as rude and cruel. It is, 
however, the method of treatment which is the best adapted 
for obtaining the wool unmixed with the hairs, which would 
render it unsuited for being spun and woven. The wool may, 
in this manner, be taken from the skin without violence, and 
would fall off naturally, and be left amongst the heaths and 
in the bogs. ‘The wool is scarcely ever washed before being 
pulled, and the quantity is very small, not exceeding from 14 
to 2 Ib. in the unwashed state. It is remarkable for its soft- 
ness and the tenuity of its filaments. It is admirably suited 
for being made into hose and fine flannels, butis deficient in 
the property of felting, and is therefore ill adapted for the 
making of cloths. The black-coloured wool is the most 
valued for the making of hose and caps, because it does not 
require the addition of dyes. The hides with the wool form 
beautiful pelisses, and would be valuable on this account, 
were such dresses in demand in this country. 

The Sheep, over a great part of these islands, are pastured 
in common, and the general treatment of them is rude in a 
remarkable degree. The animals are often left entirely to 


BREEDS OF THE ZETLAND AND ORKNEY ISLANDS. 61 


their own resources in the bleak and desolate islands in which 
they are imprisoned. They are collected by being hunted to- 
gether once a-year, stripped of their fleeces, marked by their 
respective owners, and then turned adrift, until such as sur- 
vive are caught again in the following year, and subjected to 
the same treatment. In all cases, the number of Rams is 
allowed to be disproportioned to that of the Ewes; and, in 
many cases, the number of the sexes are nearly equal. When 
Sheep are wanted from the pastures, they are run down by 
dogs ; and hence these poor creatures acquire as great a ter- 
ror for the dog as in other countries they do for the wolf or 
other beasts of prey. The dogs, termed Had or Sheep Dogs, 
are taught to select a particular Sheep, and run him down; 
and curious old laws existed regarding the property and con- 
trol of these animals. Under the whole of this barbarous 
system, the mortality is excessive; all the profit to be de- 
rived from a proper management of a flock of sheep is lost ; 
and all the means are foregone of improving the breed, by the 
selection of the male and female parents. 

Tt is painful to draw such a picture of neglect, as appli- 
cable to the rural economy of any part of a country like Bri- 
tain. Yet it is consoling to know that the seeds of improve- 
ment are scattered in these long-neglected Islands. In seve- _ 
ral of them are settled various landed gentlemen, who are 
equal in intelligence to any in the kingdom, and who have 
begun to give the due attention to the resources of their 
country. Thé efforts of such individuals to improve the do- 
mestic animals of their estates cannot fail to meet with suc- 
cess, nor the benefits of their example to be gradually dif- 
fused. The power of steam has further been called into ope- 
ration, to bring those remote Islands into contact with the 
markets of the South ; and now the breeders, instead of suf- 
fering their Sheep to become the prey of eagles, ravens, and 
gulls, and to perish through hunger and neglect, have the 
means of carrying their rich and delicate mutton direct to the 
best markets of consumption in the kingdom. 


62 . THE SHEEP. 


A question of economical interest for these Islands is, 
whether the existing breeds should be preserved, or new 
ones substituted. The interests of individuals may be ex- 
pected to lead them to the latter course, at least to the ex- 
tent of crossing the native races with superior stock. In 
this manner an immediate profit may be expected ; and it is 
not to be supposed that individual breeders will abandon a 
mean of present profit for one more distant and contingent. 
Under this system, indeed, the pure Scandinavian Breed will 
diminish in numbers, and ultimately disappear; but this 
could scarcely be regretted, if a more useful class of animals 
were to be substituted. If it were wished to preserve the 
ancient race in such of the Islands as yet produce them, then 
the attention of breeders should be directed to the proper 
management of their flocks, to better feeding, and to long 
and persevering care in the selection of the males and females. 
Without attention to these things, the present race of Zet- 
_ land Sheep can never be recovered from the degeneracy into 
which it has fallen during ages of maltreatment and neglect. 

The Merino Sheep have been tried for the purpose of cross- 
_ ing the native race; but, as might have been anticipated 

from the habitudes of the Merino parents, the progeny was 
found unfitted to withstand the rigour of the climate, and the 
exposed situation of the country. The Cheviot Sheep have, 
however, been used for crossing with advantage, and appear 
to be the breed which is greatly the best for the purpose. 

The Short-tailed Sheep of Northern Europe had also been 
early carried to the Hebrides, doubtless by the Norwegians. 
Some of the descendants of these Sheep remain, but only in 
scattered remnants, which are rapidly disappearing, their 
size being diminutive, and the interest of the breeders having 
everywhere led them to adopt breeds of more economical 
value. Polycerate Sheep, too, are sometimes found in the 
Islands of Scotland, doubtless the descendants of the same 
race in Iceland and the north of Europe, but they are grene- 
rally worthless, and are nearly extinct. 


ek 


THE SOFT-WOOLLED SHEEP OF SCOTLAND. 63 


IIl._THE SOFT-WOOLLED SHEEP OF SCOTLAND. 


Although the early inhabitants of North Britain directed 
more attention to the Goat than to the Sheep, it appears. 
that Sheep were reared by them in some numbers in the 
higher countries, and largely in the plains, when the country 
had become cleared of wood and partially cultivated. Rem- 
nants of the older races existed up to a late period in the 
last century; but on the introduction of Sheep of a larger - 
size, and of more economical value, the older races progres- 
sively disappeared, until a few scattered flocks only were 
left in some of the more distant parts of the country, chiefly — 
in the Hebrides and Central Highlands. These Sheep pre- 
sented different characters, according to the nature of the 
localities in which they were reared; but they may be de- 
scribed, in general, as being of small size, and lank agile 
forms; as having generally short slender horns; and as hav- 
ing a soft wool, fitted for the making of flannels, but not 
well adapted for felting. They had the tails long, and not 
short and flat like the Sheep of northern Europe; so that 
they differed entirely in race from those which, at a sub- 
sequent period, were introduced into the remoter Islands 
by the Scandinavian pirates. They were of various colours, \ 
frequently brown, and often this brown colour remained on | 
the face when the rest of the body had become white ; on~ 
which account they sometimes received the name of the Dun- 
faced breed. They were exceedingly wild, and hardly to be 
confined by common enclosures. They were hardy in a re- 
markable degree, subsisting on scanty fare, and bearing the 
rudest treatment, and were remarkably exempt from those 
maladies which frequently produce such ravages in the mo- 
dern races. 

The Soft-woolled Sheep may be said to be now nearly ex- 
tinct as a separate variety in Scotland; but kindred races 


64 THE SHEEP. 


still exist in Wales and Ireland, the remnants, we may be- 
lieve, of the ancient Sheep of the country. 


IlJ.—_THE BREED OF THE HIGHER WELSH 
MOUNTAINS. 


The Sheep of Wales, inhabiting a country partly of moun- 
tains and partly of valleys and plains, may be expected to 
present great diversities of character. Accordingly, we find 
a variety of breeds, from the wilder races of the higher 
mountains to the larger Sheep of the lower country. The 
_latter classes of Sheep, however, are not truly Welsh. They 
are the Leicester, Cotswold, and other Sheep of the English 
plains, either pure or mixed with the races of the mountains. 
It is the Mountain Sheep alone that we are to regard as the 
genuine Sheep of Wales, the descendants, it may be believed, 
of the ancient Sheep of South Britain. 

Of the Mountain Sheep of Wales there are numerous 
minor varieties, but generally they may be divided into two 
groups, which may be regarded as the types to which all 
the others have more or less affinity. A great part of the 
mountains of Wales, it is to be observed, is absolute com- 
mon, in which animals of every kind may be mingled to- 
gether ; and however distinct the original races may have 
been, it is not to be supposed that they can have remained 
without intermixture during the many ages in which Wales 
has existed nearly in its present state. Notwithstanding, 
however, of this amalgamation, there may be traced the 
characters of two very distinct groups; the first, the wilder 
Sheep of the higher mountains; the second, a race generally 
inhabiting a lower range of pasturage, and possessed of pecu- 
liar characters. The first may be termed the Sheep of the 
Higher Mountains, as indicating their habitat; the second, 
the Soft-woolled Sheep of Wales, as denoting the character 
of the fleece. 


6 


THE BREED OF THE HIGHER WELSH MOUNTAINS. 65 


The Sheep of the higher mountains are of small size, 
searcely capable of fattening to above 5 lb. the quarter, and 
_ have horns, both in the male and female, slightly curved, and 


stretching backwards in the manner of the Goat; their tail | 


is of ordinary length ; they have a ridge of coarse hairs pass- bo 


ing along the spine to the tail, surrounding the neck and | 
reaching to the dewlap; the wool on the sides is of medium | 


fineness, and on the haunch it is coarse and wiry. The colour 
of the fleece is black, gray, or brown. 

This remarkable race has the wool and aspect of the 
Sheep, but in habits it rather resembles the Goat. It seeks 
the summits of mountains; it vaults, rather than runs ; 
and feeds on the dry aromatic plants of mountains in prefer- 
ence to the herbage of the lower valleys. Like all the na- 
tive Sheep of elevated regions, the fleece of these wild little 


animals is a mixture of hair and wool, so that their bodies ° 


may be better protected from the inclemency of the weather. 
They are almost as difficult to be approached in their native 
haunts as the Deer or the Antelope. Some say that they 
station sentinels on the higher ground, who give notice to the 
scattered flock of the approach of danger by a kind of shrill 
bleat resembling a falsetto tone. As in the case of the An- 
telope, no sooner is one alarmed, than all the others bound 
off together, gazing behind them as they run in the manner 
of the Musmon and Argali. The rams attack the ewes at 
the period of bringing forth their young—a singular instinct, 
existing, it has been seen, in the wild races of the Zetland 
and Orkney Islands, and given, it may be believed, to pre- 
vent the multiplication of their numbers beyond the means 
of subsistence. 

It may appear remarkable that this race should preserve 
itself distinct from the others with which the commons and 
mountains of the country are stocked. It is to be observed, 
however, that this is in accordance with the habits of all 
Sheep possessing a peculiar character and temperament. 
Thus, the naturalized Merino Sheep never amalgamate tho- 

E 


66 THE SHEEP. 


roughly with the races with which they are mingled in the 
same pastures; they collect in separate flocks upon the 
higher grounds, and crowd together when alarmed ; in like 
manner, if any of the breeds of Forest Sheep are mingled 
with those of the lower country, they congregate together, 
and pursue their own range of pasturage. Now, from what- 
ever causes the wild Sheep of Wales assumed their existing 
character, they have acquired the habits proper to their 
situation. They keep by choice to their natural habitat, and 
herd together; and hence it is that the original characters 
' of the race have not merged in those of other varieties. 

This race of Sheep, though with some change of character, 
is found all over the most elevated parts of Wales, from the 
inland mountains of Glamorganshire to those of Merioneth 
and Caernarvon. They are numerous in Caernarvon, and 
when seen by the traveller have more the aspect of Dogs and 
Foxes than of Sheep. 

As this race becomes naturalized in a lower range of 
mountains, or in any way is placed under more favourable 
circumstances with respect to the supplies of food, it becomes 
enlarged in size, and loses part of its natural rudeness. Ac- 
cordingly, gradations are observed in the character of the 
race, from the more elevated and barren mountains, to those 
which are of a lower altitude, or more productive of herbage. 
The Sheep of Radnor and some other parts are of the same 
descent, but are so changed by the more favourable circum- 
~ stances under which they are reared, that they are looked 
upon as distinct breeds. They have manifestly, however, a 
common origin with the wilder Sheep of the higher moun- 
tains ; and there are everywhere examples to shew the pro- 
gressive steps by which the wilder race may assume a new 
Set of characters, in consequence of better food and atten- 
tion to the parents in breeding. All the varieties of the 
Welsh Sheep which have an affinity with the race of the 
higher mountains have horns, and have more or less of black 
hair on the face and legs. 


I 


THE SOFT-WOOLLED SHEEP OF WALES. 67 


The wildest race of Sheep in Wales is susceptible of im- 
provement ; but, to accomplish this to the required degree, 
a long course of selection, combined with a proper practice 
with respect to feeding, is required. But this wilder breed 
presents no characters which can render it. expedient to 
expend time and capital in cultivating it in preference to 
others already formed. The basis is bad, and the inter- 
ests of breeders will be served, either by substituting at 
once a superior breed, or by crossing the native race until 
one with better properties has -been produced. ‘T'wo races 
of improved Sheep exist in this country, which might 
either supplant the existing races of the Welsh mountains, 
or be employed for crossing until a new class of properties 
were produced. These are the South Down and the Cheviot 
breeds. The South Down is rather suited to a dry than a 
moist climate, and its natural habitat is not similar to the 
humid soils of Wales. It is conceived, therefore, that the 
Cheviot breed, though inferior as a breed to the South Down, 
presents a combination of properties which may adapt it 
better to this part of the country. It is, in all useful pro- 


_ perties, vastly superior to the indigenous race, and has al- 


ready been acclimated in countries more elevated and inhos- 
pitable than the highest ranges of the mountains of Wales. 


IV.—THE SOFT-WOOLLED SHEEP OF WALES. 


The most characteristic race of Sheep in Wales is that 
which has been termed the Soft-woolled breed. It may re- 
ceive this name on account of the quality of its wool, which, 
though mixed with hairs, is much less so than that of the 
wilder breeds referred to, and has a softness and tenuity of 
filament which peculiarly fit it for the making of flannels, 
one of the staple native manufactures of the Principality. It 
may, however, be more appropriately termed the White-nosed 


68 THE SHEEP. 


Breed, from a character which distinguishes it from every 
other in Wales. . 

This race of Sheep is spread over the whole of Wales, and 
is truly the distinctive breed of the country. The animals 
are of small size, usually weighing from 5 1b. to 7 lb. the 
“quarter, when grown and fat. They are of the long-tailed 
variety of Sheep, thus agreeing with the Sheep of the Celtic 
nations of Europe, and differing from those of the Scandina- 
_ vians. The males have horns, which are thin, slightly curved, 
' and bent backwards ; the females are generally destitute of 
| horns, and sometimes the males. Their noses are white, or 
pink-coloured. They have lengthened hair beneath the throat 
like a beard. Their figure is very slender, and their posterior 
limbs long, as if to fit them for vaulting as well as running. 
Their neck is thin, and thrown back in the manner of the 
Antelope or Deer. The fur of the face and body is white, 
but sometimes, as in almost all breeds of Sheep, individuals 
- wholly brown or black present themselves. 

These Sheep have all the wild characters of a mountain 
breed. They are of wandering habits, and range from pas- 
ture to pasture; they prefer the plants of mountains to the 
more succulent and nutritive herbage of plains ; they delight 
to browse on the leaves of the ivy, and on the shoots of bitter 
shrubs, and they rise upon their hinder legs to reach them 
after the manner of the Goat. They are fond of taking their 
station on elevated points, and making their way amongst 
crags and cliffs. They are wary and timid, and, like the 
wilder Sheep of the mountain summits, give notice of ap- 
proaching danger by a signal. They steal down from the: 
hills at night, and make inroads into the fields of wheat and 
other green plants. They are with difficulty confined by arti- 
ficial barriers, leaping over walls, and making their way 
through the interstices of hedges; nay, sometimes they have 
been known, when driven to a distance, to escape from the 
vigilance of their keepers, and regain their native mountains. 
They are driven to London and other markets of consump- 


ji 


THE SOFT-WOOLLED SHEEP OF WALES. 69 


tion, being generally kept by the way to be fattened in the 


richer pastures. Their mutton, like that of all the Sheep of 
Wales, is excellent, and, when fat, brings a high price. 
Many carcasses are sold in London under the name of Welsh 
mutton, when, in truth, they are the produce of crosses of dif- 
ferent kinds. 

The wool weighs from 1 lb. to 2 Ib. the fleece; it is never 
free from hairs or kemps; it possesses the character of long 
wool, and is, therefore, suited for the making of flannels, 
hose, and similar loose fabrics, rather than cloths ; never- 
theless, all the home stuffs for country use were formerly 


made of this and the other kinds of native wool. The Welsh. 


long preserved the simplicity of ancient manners, and manu- 
factured their woollen stuffs at home. The cheapness of 
mechanical labour is rapidly putting an end to this domestic 
manufacture ; to the increase, doubtless, of the resources of 


the country, though not perhaps to the advancement of . 
rural industry and happiness. A singular character exists | 


in the case of this race of sheep. The wool of the neck 


— tends to fall off. that part of the body, and hence it is a fre- 


quent practice to clip the wool of the neck and face before 
winter. 

The Sheep of Anglesea are allied to this race, but, being 
reared in a lower country, they are larger than the common 
Sheep of the mountains. Crosses have been made from 
time to time with the Sheep of Anglesea, but the affinity of 
the native race with the Soft-woolled Sheep of the mountains 
is easy to be traced, in the height behind, the low and narrow 
forequarters, and the character of the wool. The attempts 
to improve the old breed of Anglesea by crossing have not 
been successful, owing, it may be believed, to the want of per- 
severance and system; and graziers and butchers prefer the 
native to the mixed races. 

The Old Radnor Sheep have some characters in common 
with the White-nosed Breed, but they are more distinctly 
connected with the Sheep of the higher mountains. They 


; 
| 
- 


70 THE SHEEP. 


are of larger size and better form than the White-nosed 
Breed, fattening to from 7 lb. to 9 lb. the quarter. Their wool 
is of the long or combing character, but, like that of all the 
Sheep of Wales, is soft, and suited to the making of flannels. 
It is to be observed that the modern Sheep of the district, 
known commonly as the Radnor Breed, differ considerably 

_ from the true Radnors, having been crossed with the Shrop- 
shire and other breeds of the low country. 

A staple production of Wales being its Sheep, a question 
of much interest is the manner in which the different breeds 
may be improved. The people of Wales, with the attach- 
ment to old habits which distinguishes them, are averse to- 
changes, and, in the case of their Sheep, there are obstacles 
to improvement, independent of the habits of the people. A 
great part of the whole mountain pastures is common. 
Under such a system, it is difficult to introduce a beneficial 
management of sheep. At present, the treatment of the 
animals is defective in a high degree. No care is used in 
the selection of the breeding parents, and no provision is made 
for the proper feeding of the animals in winter : they are left 
in a state of nature, and scarcely looked to but. when they are 
to be caught for divesting them of the fleece. It is not un- 
common to shear the lambs in the first year, a practice highly 
detrimental in a moist and elevated country ; but the still 
worse practice exists of weaning the lambs at an early season, 
in order to milk the ewes. The lambs born in March are 
frequently weaned in May, and the ewes are milked night 
and morning until the middle of September. This miserable 
system is calculated to destroy the vigour of the Sheep, and 
take away the means to produce and rear a healthy offspring ; 
and, until it is abandoned, we may be assured that the Sheep 
of the Welsh mountains will continue puny and degenerate. 
The substitution of another breed would not remedy the evil, 
if this destructive management were continued, and there- 
fore, the primary improvement of the Sheep of Wales must 
be a change of the system of management. 


= 


L 


r 


THE BREED OF THE WICKLOW MOUNTAINS. ra 5 


It were certainly to be desired, that the ancient breeds of 
these mountains could be preserved, as being naturalized to 
the country, and producing a kind of wool, which is suited to 
a useful class of manufactures; yet, undoubtedly, individual 
breeders will find it more for their interest to adopt a breed 
already improved, than to incur the long delay and expense 
of improving the existing ones. Crossing will probably be 
resorted to more frequently than an entire substitution of a 
new breed; and it is important, that the breeders proceed 
with judgment in the system of crossing which they adopt. 
They should select the breed which experience shews to be 
the best calculated to amalgamate with the existing race. 
The most suitable for this purpose seems, as has been already 
said, to be the Cheviot, as being the inhabitants of an elevated 
country, and producing a kind of wool, which, though dif- 
ferent from the Welsh, yet brings a good price in the 
market. The Southdowns, with all their valuable properties, 
seem scarcely so well suited to these humid mountains, as the 
more robust Cheviots; and it is remarkable, that the South 
Down Breed is less in favour with breeders in the moist cli- 
mate of the western parts of this country, than towards the 
eastern coasts, where the drier climate is nearer to that of 
the Chalky Downs which may be regarded as the native 
country of the race. Some attempts have been made to cross 
the Welsh Sheep with the Black-faced Heath Breed of Scot- 
land. But a race superior to the Black-faced Heath Sheep 
could exist in the mountains of Wales, and the effect of such 
an intermixture would be to destroy that fineness of fleece 
which is proper to the existing breeds. 


V.—THE BREED OF THE WICKLOW MOUNTAINS. 


Ireland, from the fertility of the soil, and the mildness and 
humidity of the climate, is in an eminent degree adapted to 


72 THE SHEEP. 


the production of the grasses, and consequently, to the rear- 
ing of Sheep. Itis known, that from early times Sheep were 
amongst the domestic animals of the country, affording by 
their skins and fleeces covering to the inhabitants. After 
the country fell under the dominion of England, the estima- 
tion and importance of this native production is chiefly made 
known to us by cruel laws, prohibiting the exportation of the 
wool of the country ; which, notwithstanding, found its way 
in great quantity from the west of Ireland to Flanders and 
other countries where a demand for it existed. There were 
then no large manufactories in the country itself; but the 
inhabitants, like the Welsh, prepared their wool at home. 
This system, the happiest that could be for the industry and 
virtue of the people, remained even when the rural popula- 
tion was undergoing an unhappy change; and a great deal 
of coarse stuff is still made in this way by the poor peasantry. 
There are now also large manufactories of wool in Ireland ; 
and, after supplying these, there is an extensive exportation 
of the raw material and of worsted yarn to this country. 

The Sheep of Ireland consist partly of mountain breeds, 
and partly of a large long-woolled race, which exists, with 
very uniform characters, over the greater part of the country. 
This latter race, which resembled the coarser extinct breeds 
of the midland and western counties of England, is not now 
to be found in its unmixed state. It has undergone an entire 
change by the effects of crossing, and is every where greatly 
improved. 

Of the Mountain Sheep of Ireland there are several breeds, 
with characters more or less distinctly marked. Those of 
Kerry and the west of Ireland are the most extended and 
remarkable: that of the Wicklow Mountains has a more li- 
mited range, but is the most valuable. 

This breed inhabits the Wicklow Mountains in the county 
of that name. These mountains are of considerable eleva- 
tion, exposed to high winds, and possessing a humid climate. 


THE BREED OF THE WICKLOW MOUNTAINS. 73 


Remnants only of the pure breed remain, chiefly in the vale 
of Glenmalure, the original race having been very generally 
crossed by the South Down and other breeds. 

The Sheep of the Wicklow Mountains have an eveithont affi- 
nity with the Sheep of Wales. They are of small size, but 
of tolerably good form, and the mutton is excellent. They 
are very wild, and at night steal down to the lower grounds 
to pilfer the growing corn. They are destitute of horns in 
both sexes. Their faces and legs are white, but there is a con- 
stant tendency to the production of black lambs ; and there 
cannot be a doubt that the breed, if left to itself, would be- 
come wholly of that colour, A local law exists that all black 
lambs shall be destroyed. The wool is soft and fine, and 
somewhat long in the staple ; but it is always more or less 
mixed with hairs. The quality of the wool, however, as well 


as the general character of the Sheep, varies with the eleva- 


tion. In the lower rocky hills, as those which do not exceed 
800 feet above the level of the sea, the wool is more fine 


and less mixed with hairs. At a higher elevation, where | 
heath and wet bogs begin, the Sheep become smaller and 


wilder. In these, a ridge of bristly hairs extends like a mane 


along the neck and spine, and hair is likewise found in quan- 


tity on the hips and dewlaps, as in the wilder sheep of Wales. 
There is here that adaptation which is every where observed 


in this species of animals, to the physical conditions of the | 
country in which they are naturalized. The ridge of hair | 
along the spine, and on the haunches and breast, causes the © 
moisture to fall off; nay, the lambs are born with a provision | 


against the wetness of the boggy soil, there being a large 


growth of hair upon the parts which are in contact with the — 


ground when the animals repose, namely, the breast, the 
limbs, and the belly. 

The county of Wicklow, lying contiguous to the capital, is 
favourably situated for the rearing of Sheep, fitted for the 
demand of a numerous population. The practice of rearing 
lambs for early consumption has long prevailed in the dis- 


74. THE SHEEP. 


trict. The Sheep of the mountains are purchased by the 
breeders of the lower farms. The Rams are turned amongst 
the Ewes in the beginning of June, and by the end of July 
the greater part of the latter are impregnated, so that the 
Lambs are born in the months of December and January. 
At the end of a fortnight or more they are separated from 
the dams, and placed in pens in the feeding-house.. The 
Ewes are driven into the feeding-house twice a-day, and 
those whose Lambs are dead, or have been disposed of, are 
first held to be suckled, and then the Lambs are permitted 
to suck their own dams. After a time they are further fed 
with milk from the cow in addition to that of the Ewes. In 
this manner the Lambs are fed for about six weeks, when 
they are ready for use. Under this system, the inhabitants 
of Dublin are supplied with as fine early lamb as any part of 
the United Kingdom. The Wicklow Ewes are good nurses, 
and hence are tolerably well adapted to this kind of manage- 
ment. By retarding the period of receiving the male, the 
Ewes are made to be impregnated in the months of summer, 
and having acquired the habit, the Ewes retain it, and are 
kept by the breeders as long as they will bear lambs. 

From the quality of the wool, the goodness of the mutton, 
and the adaptation of the females to the rearing of early 
lambs, the pure Wicklow Mountain Breed was not undeserv- 
ing of being preserved and cultivated. The practice of cross- 
ing, however, has been introduced, and from the more im- 
mediate profit which it affords, is more likely to be pursued 
than a system of progressive improvement by breeding from. 
the native stock. The South Down Sheep have been those 
chiefly employed for crossing, and are, doubtless, calculated 
to produce a race greatly superior to the indigenous one. It 
may be believed, however, that the Cheviot, already accli- 
mated in an elevated country, would, as in the case of the 
Sheep of the Welsh Mountains, have been found better 
adapted to the crossing of the Sheep of these moist mountains. 
Nevertheless, a perseverance in a course begun, will be bet- 


THE KERRY BREED. . 75 


ter than a change of purpose; and, whichever race be pre- 
ferred, the effect will be beneficial, and in a few generations 
the indigenous race of the Wicklow Mountains may be ex- 
pected to cease to exist any where in the pure state. 

The full benefits, however,.of any kind of crossing cannot 
be obtained, unless a better system of management is intro- 
duced amongst the neglected flocks of the district. At pre- 


‘sent, the smallness of the possessions, and the existence of 


commons, are eminently unfavourable to the bringing of these 
Sheep to any perfection. Their wildness of habits, is mainly 
the result of the circumstances in which they are placed, and 
can only be corrected by enclosures, by subdivision of flocks, 
and by a regular system of management. 


VI.—-THE KERRY BREED. 


The Breeds of Sheep of Ireland may be divided into two 
general Classes, those of the mountains, bogs, and moors, 
and those of the plains, valleys, and richer country. In the 
former class, one breed has been described, that of the Wick- 
low mountains, which has been seen to be closely allied to 
the ancient Sheep of Wales. The mountain breeds ‘of other — 
parts of Ireland present very different characters, and so 
little resemble any other breeds of Sheep in the British 
Islands, that we might suppose, them to have a distinct 
parentage, did we not know the great changes produced in 
the form and characters of the species by the agency of food, 
climate, and situation. It is in the west of Ireland that we 
naturally seek for the more ancient races of the country, and 
we there find them mingled in blood with one another, and 
with the imported varieties which have spread over the same 
tracts, but in many cases presenting such characters as to 
indicate the traces’ of distinct breeds, under the common 
acceptation of the term. But it would be uninstructive to 
discriminate the minor varieties. It will suffice to present 


a ea ee a en 2 AL A a 


76 THE SHEEP. 


an example of one, which may be regarded as the type of 
several others, and whose characters lead us to conclude 
that it has remained for ages in its present state. 

The Kerry Breed of Sheep, notwithstanding of neglect and 
insufficient food, exceeds in size the breeds of Wales, of the 
Wicklow Mountains, and of many of the Old Forests of Eng- 
land. The horns are generally small and crooked, and some- 
times wanting in the female, although some of the allied 
varieties of other parts have the horns large and spiral. The 


wool is coarse, and hairy on the haunches, and to a certain 


degree along the ridge on the back, but on the sides it is very 
short and fine. The white colour of the fleece prevails, but 
there is a constant tendency to the development of the darker 
shades; and the whole Sheep would become black and brown, 
were it not for the choice by breeders of those which are 
white. These Sheep are in a remarkable degree wild and 
restless in their habits. In shape, eye, neck, position of the 
head, and general aspect, they approach to the Antelope or 
Deer tribes more than any other Sheep of this country. They 
fatten so slowly, that, even after they have arrived at matu- 
rity of age, they require a long time to become fully fat. 
They have, however, a great disposition to accumulate fat 
internally, and they are fit for the butcher when their ex- 
ternal appearance would indicate that they were still lean. 
Their mutton is juicy and of good flavour, which causes them 
to be greatly valued for domestic consumption... This is their 
really valuable property, but it is not of itself sufficient to 
render them deserving of extended cultivation. 

Although Ireland, from the mildness of its winter and mois- 
ture of the climate, is in a peculiar degree suited to the produc- 
tion of the grasses and other herbaceous plants fitted for the 
food of Sheep, yet a great part of the country is covered with 
peat, either collected in vast beds in the plains, or rising into 
eminences, or spread in thinner strata over the hills. Like 
all the countries of ancient Europe, Ireland was once covered 
with great forests, which neglect, and the prodigal waste of 


2 a ne ah ee gen ma Sb oem —- ‘i 


THE KERRY BREED. q7 


timber for fuel, and above all, the ravages of incessant wars, 
have long since eradicated. Giraldus Cambrensis, who came 
into Ireland after its first conquest by Henry II. in the twelfth 
century, states, that the country was full of woods on every 
side, but that the English, on gaining possession of it, cut 
them down, partly to deprive the banditti of their lurking- 
places, and partly to gain space for cultivation. For centuries 
the work of destruction proceeded on every hand ; and, on the 
quelling of the great Rebellion in the reign of Elizabeth, the 
remaining forests were still further reduced. To the motives 
which formerly operated was now added the desire of gain, 
and immense ship-loads of magnificent timber were sent to 
foreign parts, and many charcoal manufactories were esta- 
plished. Even in the seventeenth century, the ruin of these — 
noble woods had not been completed. Boate, who published 
his Natural History of Ireland about the middle of the cen- 
tury, though he complains that many great woods which the 
maps represent had vanished, still describes numbers as ex- 
isting which are now no more. Speaking of the province of 
Leinster, he says, that Wicklow, and King’s and Queen’s 
counties, were throughout full of woods, some many miles 
long and broad, and that part of the counties of Wexford and 
Carlow were greatly furnished with them. Of Ulster, he 
writes, that there were great forests in the county of Donegal, 
and in the north of Tyrone; likewise at Fermagh, along 
Lake Erne, in Antrim, and in the north part of Down. The 
greater part of the latter county, however, as well as Ar- 
magh, Monaghan, and Cavan, which, in the war with Tyrone, 
had been encumbered with thick forests, had then become 
almost bare. With respect to Munster, he tells us, that the 
counties of Kerry and Tipperary possessed many great 
forests, notwithstanding that the English, especially the 
Earl of Cork, had made great havoc with the woods. 

In this manner proceeded the spoiling of the natural riches 
of the beautiful Isle. The last Wolf was killed at the be- 


78 THE SHEEP. 


ginning of the eighteenth century, shewing that then the 
destruction of the great Irish forests was nearly completed. 
In the place of these verdant Woods, have arisen the dreary 
Bogs which have covered so great a part of the land with 
the aspect of desolation,—affording fuel, indeed, by the 
sweat and toil of the miserable inhabitants, but covered 
with the innutritious plants proper to peat, and affording 
but a scanty sustenance to the herds and flocks that tenant 
them. 

The general treatment of the Sheep of the mountainous 
and peaty tracts of Ireland is rude, in a degree which the 
breeders of England will find it difficult to credit. Some- 
times the animals are mixed in common on the peaty moun- 
tains and flat bogs, where numbers of them perish from 
want and disease; and often they spread like wild beasts 
over the country, stealing what they can obtain: sometimes 
_they are coupled together, and left to find their food as they 
may, or tethered on patches of grass and rushes, or kept in 
the miserable cabins of their owners. All over the west of 
Ireland, from Donegal to Kerry, are to be found half-starved 
Sheep, either straying in wild flocks, of every age and kind 
together, or dragging one another in couples along, or fastened 
where they can find any food. “Our best sort,” says Mr 
Sampson, in his Survey of Londonderry, ‘ are bought either 
in the fairs of the south-western counties, or else at Dervock, 
to which they are driven by jobbers from those pasture 
counties. I need say nothing of them. Our own strain is 
of all shapes and qualities, horned and without horns, coarse- 
woolled and fine; almost all are humpy-boned and restless. 
Not long ago, one might see hundreds of Sheep travelling 
from farm to farm unnoticed and unowned. Every servant 
boy in the county who had a few shillings saved, laid it out 
on a Sheep or two, which he let loose on the bounty of Pro- 
vidence, and the toleration of his neighbourhood. Towards 
May, all these flocks were driven to the mountains. In the 


igiianet reticent 


THE KERRY BREED. 79 


time of snow, these depredators, like the locusts of Egypt, 
devoured every thing before them. I have lost at one time 
two thousand head of curled kale. They get no winter fod- 
der but what they can steal.” 

These remarks applied to the smaller races of the bogs 
and mountains, and are still partially applicable. The long- 
woolled Sheep of the richer country are under different cir- 
cumstances, and will be referred to hereafter. The means 
by which the more neglected races can be improved, are the 
same as in other cases have been adopted,—a system of judi- 
cious crossing, or the substitution of superior breeds, and a 
better system of feeding and general treatment. 

But when we speak of defects in the husbandry of Ireland, 
we must remember that the removal of them is not always 
within the reach of common remedies. The evil may be seen, 
but the source of it may lie in the condition of the people, 
the state of property, and the relations between landlord and 
tenant. Six hundred years ago, Ireland was subjugated by 
her avaricious neighbour, and successive rebellions led to 
repeated overthrows, and to renewed plunder. ‘The country 
was divided amongst the conquerors and their adherents, and 
for ages a great part of the disposable produce was with- 
drawn. Absenteeism became the habit of the favoured few ; 
and at this hour, a larger tribute is thus imposed upon the 
industry of the country than any conqueror ever imposed 
upon a subject colony ; and the country is poor, her labourers 
are unemployed, and her population is discontented, notwith- 
standing that she exports the largest quantity of raw produce 
_of any country in the world of the same extent. One effect 
results from this destitution, that there is no barrier between 
the tenant and the demands of the receiver of rents. In 
England, the habits and condition of the people are opposed 
to an excessive exaction on the industry of the farmer. The 
English yeoman will not take land at all unless he has the 
means to live, and to obtain a fitting return from his capital 


80 THE SHEEP. 


in trade. The Irish peasant must take land in order that 
he may subsist, and is compelled to share his pittance with 
another to the uttermost residue that will permit himself to 
live. Hence the rents in Ireland are larger, in proportion to 
the means of payment, than in any country in Europe. While 
this defective relation exists between the landlord and tenant, 
—while the disposable produce of the land is expended out 
of the country which it should enrich, and away from the 
poor man whom it should employ,—while the land is parcelled 
out in order that excessive rents may be wrung from those 
that till it,—while the pecuniary claims of the landlord or 
middle men are more directly answered by means of peasants 
content to subsist on the scantiest pittance, than by the in- 
dustry of tenants possessed of means to improve the land,— 
we must expect that the resources of the country will be 


imperfectly developed, and that poor and wretched husband- 
“men, as well as miserable breeds of Sheep, will possess it. 


VII.—THE FOREST BREEDS OF ENGLAND. 


England, like the sister Island, was once covered. with 
noble forests, which gradually fell before the ravages of war, 
and the progress of the settler. But, on the conquest of the 
Normans, vast tracts of fine country were retained in the 
state in which they then existed, for the purposes of the 
chase, but retaining the names of forests, chases, and other 
denominations indicative of their original nature, and the 
purposes to which they had been applied ; such were Windsor 
Forest, Sherburne Forest, Mendip Forest, and many more. 
Even to the reign of Elizabeth, a large part of the whole sur- 
face of England was in the state of forest; but, in place of 
vast tracts reserved for the capricious sports of the sove- 
reign, or the great feudatories, the unoccupied grounds had 


THE FOREST BREEDS OF ENGLAND. 81 


been gradually settled upon, acquired by individuals through 


royal grants and otherwise, or left in a state of common pro- ; 


perty, in which inhabitants of towns or the neighbouring 
country acquired the privilege of pasturage and other rights. 
The Royal Forests were by degrees reduced to a small ex- 
tent, as compared with their former state, and are now partly 
planted for the supply of naval timber; and, with respect to 
the Commons, these have been long in the course of division, 
under the sanction of Acts of Parliament. 

The native Sheep kept on these forests and larger com- 
mons often acquired distinctive characters, forming well-de- 
fined breeds. Of these several yet remain, and, until late in 
the last century, they were very numerous. Most of them, 
however, are no longer to be recognised as separate varie- 
ties, and few of them remain without intermixture with the 
Sheep of the adjoining country. They were generally of 
small size and defective form, but had usually short fine 


wool, suited for the manufacture of cloths. Their faces and 


legs were sometimes white, but generally black, gray, or dun: 
they had usually horns, but sometimes the horns were want- 
ing in one or both sexes. They were wild and thriftless, 
but, like all the smaller unimproved races, yielded excellent 
mutton. The cultivation of the forests, in all cases, caused 
the substitution of superior breeds ; and, even where cultiva- 
tion did not take place, the interests of the owners led them 
to cross their flocks with the superior breeds of the cultivated 
country. 

In the poorer and more elevated parts of the counties of 
Stafford, Leicester, Cheshire, Shropshire, and others, are still 
to be found the remains of old Forest Sheep, distinguished 


by black or gray faces and legs, and yielding short clothing | 


wool. Those of Cannock Chase yet exist, though they have 

been mostly crossed. They are destitute of horns in both 

sexes, and the wool weighs from 2 to 3lb. the fleece. The 

Sheep, likewise, of the ancient Forest of Delamere in Che- 

shire are still in existence: they are the type of the old 
F 


| 
| 


— - 


2 LOOSE RAI mpi OTM ene! Sp wo 


Sree a a 


82 THE SHEEP. 


Sheep of Shropshire, and approach to the general form of the 

Southdown. J 
> Of the Forest Breeds, two remarkable ones yet exist in 
| the elevated country between the Bristol and British Chan- 
' nels, the one inhabiting the heathy tract of granite forming 
the Forest of Dartmoor, the other the district of greywacke 
of the Forest of Exmoor, at the sources of the river Exe, on 
the confines of Somerset and Devon. These two races have 
long attracted attention, from their having supplied the well- 
known Oakhampton mutton, so named from the sheep having 
been killed at that town, whence the carcasses are sent to 
London. But the Oakhampton mutton now not only includes 
that of the Forest Sheep, but that of the crosses between 
them and other breeds. 

The Dartmoor Sheep are very small in size, and, like the 
Sheep of Wales, have long soft wool, in which respect they 
differ from the other Forest Breeds. The faces and legs are 
white, and the males have horns. They are exceedingly 
wild and restless. They are reared in their native pastures 
of heath, and fattened in the lower country. They will re- 
main feeding in the valleys in winter, but no sooner does the 
vegetation of spring commence than they seek to regain their 
native pastures, and endeavour to break through the fences 
opposed to their return ; and even the crosses retain this 
instinct of the race. 

These Sheep produce mutton which bears a high price, and 
are constitutionally well suited to the barren undrained dis- 
trict to which they are indigenous; but yet they are an 
unprofitable race of Sheep, from their small size, defective 
form, and, above all, their wild and restless temper. The im- 
mediate profit from crossing them has been so great, that the 
pure breed is rapidly diminishing in numbers, and will soon 
become extinct. The principal breeds with which they have 
been crossed are the Leicester and South Down. The Leices- 
ter cross is preferred, being more hardy than that with the 
Southdowns, which seem to amalgamate less freely with the 


THE FOREST BREEDS OF ENGLAND. © 83 


long-woolled breeds of Wales and the west of England, than 
even the long-woolled breeds of the plains. 

The Exmoor Sheep are yet smaller, more wild, aia more 
intractable than the Dartmoor. The district they inhabit, 
near the Bristol Channel, is of limited extent. Although 


their habitat is so near to that of the Dartmoors, they pos- 
sess their own characters, and so may be termed a breed. | 


The males have a large beard under the chin, from which 


cause they have the aspect of Goats; and they have much of 
the agility and strength of these animals. Like Goats, they 
ascend precipices, and are with difficulty confined by ordinary 
walls and fences. They are very bold, attacking Sheep much 


larger than themselves. The females, as in the case of other , 
-wild breeds, are considerably smaller than the males, from — 


whom they receive the roughest treatment. The wool of — 
these curious Sheep is long and silky, and their mutton is _ 
excellent. Like the Dartmoors, they are disappearing in| 


their pure state, from the effects of crossing, and have even, 
in some cases, given entire place to the Cheviots, which 
have been introduced into the district, and are found in all 
respects superior to the native stock. 

- A race of Sheep, of allied characters to the Exmoor, 
stretches westward along the Bristol Channel to the rich 
country on the Parret; and even on the Mendip hills, to the 
eastward, traces of the Exmoor form appear in the races of 
the country. On the great Forest of Mendip, the Sheep were 
formerly distinguished by the fineness of their wool; but, 
with the enclosure of the forest, the ancient race ceased to 
exist in a state of purity. 

Of the various Forest Breeds of England, none is now 
likely to be cultivated in the pure state, because a long course 
of careful breeding would be required to communicate the 
suitable development of form, and because superior breeds 
have now been produced, which can either be made to cross 
the original ones, or be substituted for them. But it is to be 
regretted that earlier attention was not directed to some 


Ser errr renter a 


ig [QO 


84 THE SHEEP, 


of these races, which possess fine wool, and which, by being 
acclimated in a lower country, would have increased in size 
and economical value. Some of the Forest Sheep of Stafford- 
shire were at least equal to the original Southdowns; and, 
had they been cultivated with the same care, might have 
been extended to districts to which the Southdowns, bred in 
a country of chalk and fine herbage, are less adapted. 


VIII-—THE BLACK-FACED HEATH BREED. 


From the high lands of Derbyshire on the south, to the 
confines of Scotland on the north, extends a chain of rugged 
heathy mountains, whose summit ridge separates the waters 
of the Tyne, the Tees, the Swale, the Wharfe, and other 
rivers which flow to the eastward, from those of the Ribble, 
the Lowther, the Lune, and others which flow westward. The 
elevation of this tract is from 1200 to 3000 feet, the highest 
summits being Cross Fell, near the sources of the South Tyne 
and Tees, on the eastern part of Cumberland; Skinner Fell, 
on the confines of Yorkshire and Westmoreland ; Wharnside 
and others in the westerly part of Yorkshire. This central 
chain is separated from the yet higher mountains of Cum- 
berland and Westmoreland on the west, by the beautiful 
vales of Kendal and Eden. The tract is destitute of bold- 
ness and grandeur, and, towards the east, passes into the 
tame moors of Northumberland, Durham, and Yorkshire. 
This dreary tract is generally covered with coarse heaths, 
mixed with sedges, rushes, and the less nutritious grasses, 
and, from being exposed to the winds of both the eastern and - 


western seas, possesses a cold climate. It has given rise to 
a race of Sheep now very widely diffused. This race has 
been termed the Black-faced Heath Breed, a name which, 
though it does not distinguish it from some of the Forest 
Breeds, may be retained, as indicating its peculiar habitat in 
a country of heaths. 


THE BLACK-FACED HEATH BREED. 85 


The Black-faced Heath Breed is chiefly found in the more 
northerly division of the chain of mountains referred to, be- 


ginning in the heathy lands of Yorkshire and Lancashire. | 


It extends across the vales of Kendal and Eden to the higher 
mountains of Cumberland and Westmoreland on the west, 
and by the Carter Fell into Scotland, where it oceupies the 
great range of the greywacke hills stretching from St Abb’s 
Head on the east to the Irish Channel on the west. It 
stretches through the upper part of Lanarkshire into Argyle- 
shire, and all through the Highlands of Scotland, from the 
Grampians to the Pentland Firth. It has spread to all the 
Hebrides, and even to the Islands of Orkney and Zetland. 
This breed may be supposed to have found its way into 
Scotland by the mountains of the north of England. It has 
been settled for a period unknown in all the high lands of 
the countries of Roxburgh, Dumfries, Selkirk, Peebles, La- 
nark, and the adjoining districts. Tradition asserts that it 
was introduced into Etterick Forest by one of the Kings of 
Scotland, but it is rather to be believed that it found its way 
into the Border counties by the natural route of the moun- 
tains. Its introduction into Argyleshire, and the Central and 
Northern Highlands, has been of very recent origin, having 
taken place about the middle of last century, when Sheep 
began to supersede the herds of cattle which then abounded 
in the Highlands. By degrees, it displaced the ancient races 
of the country, of which only scattered remnants now exist. 
The Black-faced Heath Breed possesses characters which 
distinguish it from every other in the British Islands. It is of 
the smaller races of Sheep with respect to the weight at which 
it arrives, but it is larger and more robust than the Zetland, 
the Welsh, and the ancient Soft-woolled Sheep which it dis- 
placed. It somewhat resembles the Persian, so that it might 
be conjectured that it is derived from the East. But it is 
more natural to assume that its peculiar characters have been 
communicated to it by the effects of food and climate, in the 


i 


- emi ei te APNE PNT 


86 “THE SHEEP. 


, rough heathy district from which it is derived. The male and 
the female have horns, very large and spirally twisted in the 
male, but sometimes disappearing in the female. The limbs 
are long and muscular, and the general form is robust; but 
the shoulders are-not so low as in the Welsh breeds, nor are 
the posterior limbs solong. The face and legs are black, 
and there is a tendency to this colour in the fleece; but there 
is no tendency to the brown or russet colour, which distin- 
guishes the older fine-woolled races. The fur is shaggy and 
the wool coarse, in which respect it differs from that of all 
the other mountain breeds of the country. It is of medium 
length, and weighs about three pounds the fleece when washed. 
These Sheep are very hardy, and capable of subsisting on the 
» eoarsest heaths. They do not, however, like the Sheep of 
| Wales, prefer the summits of mountains, but feed wherever 
| pasture can be obtained; and are not so nice in the choice 
of herbage as the Southdowns, Merinos, and other races de- 
rived from countries yielding the finer grasses. Although 
wild and independent in their habits, they are not so restless 
as the mountain Sheep of Wales and other parts, but can be 
induced to remain in enclosures, when sufficient food is sup- 
plied to them. The ordinary weight of the wethers, when 
killed at the age of about four years, is fifteen pounds the 
quarter ; but individuals are made to exceed this weight, 
when properly treated and sufficiently fed from an early age. 
The mutton is not so delicate as that of the Sheep of Wales, 
or the Southdowns of England, but it is more juicy, has more 
of the venison flavour,’ and is preferred to every other by 
those who are used to it. It is the mutton which is princi- 
pally consumed in all the larger towns of Scotland; and great 
numbers of the Sheep, at the age of three years and up- 
wards, are carried to the pastures of the south, to be fattened 
for the English markets. 

An important property of this breed is its nibputtien: to a 
country of heaths, in which respect it excels every other. It 


THE BLACK-FACED HEATH BREED. 87 


is this property, as much as its hardiness, that has rendered | 


it so suitable to the heathy mountains where it is acclimated, 
and where it finds subsistence beyond the ordinary range of 
other Sheep. It feeds on the loftiest mountains, up to the 
very verge where the heaths give place to the musci and 
other plants of the higher latitudes. Feeding much on the 
shoots of heath, these Sheep find subsistence, in the times of 
snow and severe frosts, better than any other in this country. 
The mothers are hardy nurses, and are able to bring up their 
young, when they themselves have been exposed to severe 
privations. <A great defect of this breed is the character of 
the fleece, which, besides being thin on the body, yields wool 
fit only for the manufacture of carpets and the coarser stuffs. 
Little general attention has been paid to the quality of the 
fleece, although it is susceptible of considerable improvement. 
A defect of the wool, very common in this breed, is the ex- 
istence of what are termed kemps. These consist of hard 
and wiry filaments mixed with the pile. They are deficient 
in the felting property, and in the oily secretion which 
moistens the true wool. The removal of kemps is effected 


by superior food, and by breeding from parents free from the — 
defect. Sometimes individuals of this breed are born with \- 


wool which is fine and short. Were advantage taken of this 
occurrence, it might be possible, by means of breeding, to 
produce a variety with fine in place of coarse wool. 


This breed, extending over a great variety of situation and. 


soils, from the moist moors of Yorkshire and other parts to 
the rocky mountains of the north of Scotland, presents a 
great diversity of size and aspect. In some of the lower and 
less heathy moors both of England and Scotland, the Sheep 
have so far deviated from the ordinary type, as to have lost 
their horns, and the black colour of the legs and face. This 
variety is generally of smaller size, and less hardy habits, 
than those which are naturalized on the drier mountains of 


abundant heath. The best of the breed are found in Tweed-- 


dale in Scotland, which may be partly due to the nature of 


88 THE SHEEP. 


the country, and partly to the superior care bestowed in 
breeding. Those existing in the hills of Cumberland, West- 
moreland, Yorkshire, and Lancashire, are much inferior to 
those of the Border counties of Scotland. Over a great part 
of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland, the breed has de- 
generated, from the want of care, and from insufficient food. 
In many of these situations, indeed, the’ stock may be said 
to be mixed, for it has been the result of crosses with the 
original races. This is in an especial manner the case in 
the Hebrides, where the animals are small, and every way in- 
ferior to the genuine Heath Breed. 

The treatment of this hardy race of Sheep has a necessary 
relation to the circumstances of the country in which it is 
produced. The breeder of the Sheep is not usually the per- 
son who fattens them for use. He rears them to the age 
which suits the nature of his farm, and disposes of them to 
others who have farms on which they can be kept till they 
have arrived at the proper age for being fattened. They are 
then disposed of to the graziers and farmers, whose pastures, 
or means of supplying artificial food, enable them to prepare 
them for the butcher. This species of transfer is continually 
going on, and the numerous fairs of the country are the marts 
to which vast flocks of these Sheep are brought at different 
times. They find their way to the ultimate markets of con- 
sumption at various ages, but mostly when between three 
and four years old, and when the mutton has arrived at its 
greatest perfection in juiciness and flavour. Increasing 
numbers of them are now carried to the markets of London 
and other great towns, aided by the facilities of intercourse 
afforded by steam navigation. 

The means of rearing these numerous Sheep are afforded 
by the stocks of ewes maintained on the farms of the breeders, 
the number of each flock of ewes depending on the quality 
and extent of the natural pastures, and the age to which the 
progeny is reared on the breeding-farm. Thus, when the 


Sheep are sold when lambs or hoggets, the proportion of 


THE BLACK-FACED HEATH BREED. 89 


ewes is in a corresponding degree larger than when the pro- 
geny is kept to. the age of wethers. In general, one shep- 
herd is reckoned sufficient for twenty-five scores of ewes, but 
for a much greater number-of young sheep and wethers. 
The rams are admitted to the ewes about the 22d of No- 
vember, so that the season of lambing may not begin before 
the tardy vegetation of spring may be expected. During the 
months of winter, the pregnant ewes are suffered to range 
over those parts of the farm where food can be picked up; 
the rushes, sedges, and other herbaceous plants mixed with 
the heaths, affording a scanty subsistence, rendered precari- 
ous by the falls of snow which often cover these dreary wastes 
for weeks or months at a time. The artificial provender that 
can be supplied is confined to a little coarse hay during deep 
snows, but even this is often wanting, and all the food sup- 
plied is what the animals can collect on their natural pas- 
tures. These wild and hardy Sheep, however, dig up the 
Snowy surface to reach the herbs beneath, and support life 
under circumstances in which the more delicate races would 
perish. Yet, as it is, many die from the inclemency of the 
weather and the want of food, and numbers often are over- 
whelmed by falls of snow so sudden and violent that there is 
no escape. In districts where the mountains are of less 
elevation, and artificial shelter can be supplied, the condi- 
tion of these mountain flocks is in a corresponding degree 
less precarious ; but, generally, they are placed in situations 
which subject them to the evil of frequent destitution. 
When the season of lambing arrives, the ewes are often 
in a very emaciated condition; but such good and hardy 
hurses are these mountain Sheep, that they are able to bring 
up their young under privations which few other breeds 
could contend against. The shearing of them takes place 
about the beginning of July. The ewes, as well as the 
other grown sheep on the farm, are driven to a river or 
pool, and made to leap from the bank and swim across. 
The same care is rarely bestowed on washing these wild — 


CT ee St 


90 THE SHEEP. 


Sheep as in the case of the finer breeds. In a few days 
after being washed they are shorn. After the middle of 
July, or about three months from the birth, the lambs are 
separated from the mothers. This is done simply by re- 
moving them to another part of the farm. In a short time 
they forget one another, and the milk of the dam ceases to 
be secreted. It was formerly the universal practice to milk 
the ewes for six or seven weeks, or even more, after the 
lambs were weaned. This practice is now considerably dis- 
used in the districts where the management of Sheep is the 
best understood, it being found that the profit from the milk 
is rarely compensated by the disturbance of the flock, and 
the exhaustion of the ewes previous to the perilous season 
of winter. | 

The lambs on being weaned become, in the language of 
farmers, hoggets or hogs. The wether hogs may then be 
disposed of, and such of the ewe hogs as are not to be re- 
tained for the purpose of supplying the place of the old ewes, 
which, after having borne lambs for three or four years, are 
to be disposed of. After the lambs are weaned, such of the 
ewes as have borne the proper number of lambs are selected, 
and sold in the course of the autumn. When the young 
Sheep are not disposed of in the first year, they are kept 
until the second year, and sometimes until the third or fourth 
years. Their treatment while on the farm is the same as 
that of the ewes. 

A practice exists in the case of these mountain Sheep, the 
utility of which is proved by long experience, of anointing 
the skins previous to the months of winter. The substances 
generally used are tar and butter, prepared by boiling the 
butter and tar together. The proportions used vary in dif- 
ferent districts. In some places, six pounds of butter, and 
one gallon of tar, are used for twenty Sheep, and in others 
the quantity of tar is larger. The period of smearing is the 
end of October or beginning of November. The method is 
to separate the wool by the finger, and spread the ointment 


THE BLACK-FACED HEATH BREED. 91 


longitudinally from head to tail, so that the whole body shall 
be covered. The purpose served by the process is to re- 
move insects and cutaneous diseases, and to defend the skin — 
from wetness. It is peculiarly beneficial in the case of this 
breed, whose fur is less close and fine than that of any other 
Sheep. The effect, however, is to diminish the value of the 
wool, by staining it with the colouring matter of the tar, 
which renders it less fitted for receiving the brighter colours 
in dyeing. But it increases the weight of the fleece, and 
conduces in so great a degree to the health of the animals, 
by rendering them less liable to be injured by the coldness. 
and humidity to which they are exposed, that, whatever 
doubts may exist of the expediency of the practice in the 
case of other mountain breeds, experience shews its import- 
ance in the case of this one all over the stormy countries 
which it inhabits. | 

This breéd does not seem to amalgamate very readily with — 
other races, so that crossing has not generally been success- 
ful as a means of permanent improvement. It has been > 
frequently crossed by the Cheviot, but the descendants have 
been found inferior in weight, form, and quality of wool, to 
the pure Cheviots, and to the Black-faced Heath Breed in 
hardiness and aptitude to thrive in an upland country of 
heaths. But as it is not always deemed safe to change a 
stock of Sheep habituated to their locality, the practice of a 
continued crossing with the Cheviot, until the flock has 
acquired the characters of the latter, has been sometimes 
adopted, so that the original Black-faced stock has become in 
_ time almost Cheviot. Another species of crossing has been 
remarkably successful, namely, the employing of males of the 
Leicester or South Down breeds for a first cross. The lambs, 
the result of this mixture, are excellent, rising to a much 
greater weight than those of the pure Black-faced blood. 
Great numbers of this mixed race are now produced, and an 
increased source of profit is thus opened to breeders by the 
sale of their young Sheep. Of these crosses, the best has 


92 THE SHEEP. 


been found to be with the Leicesters. That with the South- 
downs produces very handsome Sheep, having perfectly black 
faces and legs, and a close good fleece; but they scarcely 
attain the size of the Leicester crosses, and the latter ac- 
cordingly are preferred for the special purpose for which 

this species of breeding is designed. | 

Seeing the large tract of country which is occupied by 
this breed, it is of great importance to improve it to the de- 
gree to which it is susceptible. This, as in other cases, may 
be done by due selection of the breeding parents, and by 
rearing the animals under circumstances favourable to the 
full development of their forms. By adopting this practice, 
we have in every case the means of improving a breed of 
Sheep. Adequate nourishment is essential to the enlarge- 
ment of size; and all the properties of form, which consist 
with the character of the race, may be communicated and 
rendered permanent by a due attention to breeding. The 
wool of this breed being of small comparative value, the at- 
tention of improvers may be mainly directed to the carcass. 
By attending to the roundness of the trunk and breadth of 
the chest, we not only produce animals which more readily 
fatten, but which are more hardy; for in the cage of all 
breeds, it is found that narrow-chested and flat-sided ani- 
mals are less vigorous, and more subject to diseases, than 
such as have the body round and the chest wide. 

It is painful, however, to state, that this breed, so widely 
diffused, has been treated with comparative neglect. Vari- 
ous breeders have distinguished themselves by their atten- 
tion to the form of the animals, and have reaped the reward 
in the superior character of their stock ; but, over the wide 
tract of country which the breed occupies, it is far inferior in 
economical value to that to which, by due attention, it might 
arrive. Breeders would find it for their interest to procure 
rams from the southern counties of Scotland, and from the 
stocks of the breeders whose farms are good, and who have 
paid the most attention to the character of their stock. 


THE CHEVIOT BREED. ~ 93 


The Black-faced Heath Breed, after having displaced the 
former races of a large tract of country, has itself, in the 
natural course of improvement, been giving way to another 
mountain breed of different characters. This is the breed 
of the Cheviot mountains, likewise derived from a high and 
stormy country, but reared under circumstances more favour- 
able with respect to the supplies of food, possessing fine and 
not coarse wool, and cultivated with greater attention on the 
breeding farms. But the hardier Heath Breed is still the 
more suitable to a great extent of country, where the preva- 
lent herbage is heath, and still therefore merits the careful 
attention of a numerous class of breeders. 


‘ 


IX.—THE CHEVIOT BREED. 


The Cheviot Breed of Sheep is derived from a district of por- 
phyry, situated in the north of Northumberland, and extend- 
ing into Scotland, forming the mountains termed Cheviot. 
These mountains are in contact with the rugged country of 
heath, which has been seen to be the habitat of the Black- 
faced Breed; But the true Cheviot district is limited in extent, 
and differs greatly in its character from the heathy wastes 
adjoining. It is composed of a range of beautiful mountains 
tending to the conical, and mostly covered with grasses, ferns, 
wild thyme, and other plants distinctive of trap, often to the 
very summit. They are frequently in contact at their bases, 
or separated from one another by narrow valleys. While 
they pass on one side into the district of heaths, they are 
connected on the other with a rich cultivated country. Their 
highest summit is 2658 feet above the level of the sea, and 
they are frequently capped with snow long after it has dis- 
appeared from the lower grounds. 

This district has produced, from time immemorial, a race _ 
of Sheep entirely distinct in its characters from the Wild Fi 


94 THE SHEEP. 


_ Heath Breed of the elevated moors adjoining. The Cheviot 
Sheep are destitute of horns in the male and female: their 
faces and legs are white, exceptions merely occurring in the 


case of individuals in which these parts are dun. The body 
is very closely covered with wool, which is short and suffi- 
ciently fine for the making of certain cloths. The two shear- 
wethers, when fat, may weigh, on a medium, from sixteen to 
eighteen pounds the quarter, though with great differences, 
dependent on the natural productiveness of the pastures, and 
the method of treatment when young. The ewes are usually 
reckoned to weigh from twelve to fourteen pounds the quarter, 
though with such differences as depend on the nature of the 

soil and pastures, and the method of treatment. The mutton 
of these sheep is very good, though inferior in delicacy to that 
of the South Down and Welsh Sheep, and in flavour to that of 
the Black-faced Heath Breed. Their natural form is, like that 
of all mountain breeds, with a light fore-quarter; but this cha- 
racter is removed by the effects of breeding, and the modern 
Cheviots are of good form. The body is somewhat longer 
than is usually the case with the Heath Breed, which has 
given rise to the popular distinction, in districts where both 
breeds are cultivated, of Long and Short Sheep. They are 
larger in the lower countries, where a supply of turnips can 
be given: they are lighter in the more elevated tracts, where 
artificial food is scanty, or wanting. The breeders adopt the 
kind of animal which is suited to the pastures, preferring a 
short-legged larger Sheep for the lower farms, and one of 
lighter and more agile form for the more upland and colder. 
The Cheviot Sheep are of quiet habits, possessing, indeed, 
the independence of a mountain race, but having none of the 
‘indocility which distinguishes some other races. They are 
exceedingly hardy, their close covering of fine wool enabling 
- them to resist the extremes of cold. They feed more on the 
grasses, and less on the shoots of heath, than the Black-faced 
Breed, and hence they are less adapted to a country of entire 


THE CHEVIOT BREED. ae 


heath, and require a larger range of pastures to support an 
equal number of animals. 

The Cheviot Sheep have spread from their native mountains 
to a large extent of country. They now cover a great part of 
the elevated moors from which the Black-faced Heath Sheep 
were derived. They have spread over the southern moun- 
tains of Scotland, supplanting to a great extent the Heath 
Breed, which previously existed. They have been carried be- 
yond the Grampians to the extreme north of Scotland, where 
they are reared in increasing numbers. To the late Sir John 
' Sinclair is due the honour of having first carried them to 
the county of Caithness. But in some cases they have been 
placed in situations to which the coarser Heath Breed would 
have been better adapted, and many farmers, after experi- 
ence of the effect, have reverted to the ancient race. The 
breed, however, has a greatly more extensive range than has 
yet been assigned to it; for it is evident that the Cheviot, 
like every breed of Sheep, has the property of adapting itself 
to the country in which it is naturalized. Thus, the Sheep 
which are reared in the north of Scotland must give birth to 
a hardier race than is produced in the lower mountains of the 
south ; and thus we may expect to see the range of the breed 
gradually extended, and narrowing the bounds occupied by 
the coarser Black-faced. The extension that has already 
taken place of this hardy breed, must be regarded as having 
been of singular benefit to breeders and the country. It has 


been recently carried to the west of England and Wales, and. 


has every where been found suited to a cold and mountain- 
ous country. In its native country of the Cheviot Hills, it 
has been cultivated with great care by a class of breeders 
inferior to none in the kingdom for intelligence and enter- 
prise ; and thus breeders from every part of the kingdom 
have the power of resorting to the native districts of the 
breed, for the means of maintaining their stocks in a state of 
purity. . 
The wool of this breed weighs about three and a half pounds 


pene 5 ; 
Bn RM A gE 


96 THE SHEEP. 


the fleece. It formerly used to be employed for the making 
of cloths; but, from the extensive employment of the Merino 
wool of Saxony and Spain, it is now scarcely employed for 
this purpose, and is prepared by the process of combing in 
place of carding, for the coarser manufactures. The atten- 
tion of breeders, too, having been mainly directed to the fat- 
tening properties of the animal, the wool has diminished in 
fineness, though it has increased in length and weight. Its 
quality varies somewhat with the pastures, being finer where 
the shorter grasses prevail, and coarser where the herbage is 
rough and heathy. 

The management of the Cheviot resembles that of the 
Black-faced Heath Sheep; but as, for the most part, they 
occupy a lower range of mountains, better means exist of sup- 
plying them with food during the inclement season of winter. 

They are suffered to range over the grounds assigned to 
them, and their artificial food is only subsidiary to the natural 
herbage of the farm. It is supplied chiefly during falls of 
snow, and consists either of the hay of the cultivated grasses 
or clovers, where this can be obtained, or is the produce of 
the swamps and perennial meadows of the farm. When tur- 
nips can be produced, these likewise are supplied at the fit- 
ting times. The breeder of these Sheep, as in the case of 
the Black-faced Heath Breed, is not necessarily the person 
who feeds them for ultimate use. He rears them to a cer- 
tain age, and then transfers them to those whose farms enable 
them to bring them to the required maturity. This consti- 
tutes the great traffic between the farmers of the higher and 
lower country, and is a fitting division of labour and employ- 
ment. Sometimes, indeed, the breeder of these Sheep, by 
possessing low and cultivated ground, or otherwise, is en- 
abled to combine the practices of rearing and fattening ; but 
the essential destination of the higher farms is the rearing 
and not the fattening of stock, and the two occupations, 
though they may be combined, are essentially distinct. The | 
stock often passes through several intervening graziers and 

9 


THE CHEVIOT BREED. 97 


feeders, before it is fattened for ultimate use. In general, 
the Cheviot Sheep are fattened at an earlier age than the 
Black-faced Heath Sheep, partly on account of the greater 
precocity of the animals, but chiefly on account of the supe- 
rior treatment which they receive when young. The Cheviot 
breeder may sell his Sheep in the first year when hoggets, 
but very generally in the second year, either when they re- 
tain their fleece and are still hoggets, or after they are 
divested of their fleece and are shearlings, or, in the lan- 
guage of the northern farmer, dinmonts and gimmers. They ~ 
are rarely fattened when shearlings, the usual period being 
after they have lost their second fleece, and are wethers. The 
ewes, after having borne lambs for several years, generally 
three, are sold, and their place supplied by the younger 
females reared on the farm, which at that time are in the 
autumn of the second year, and about nineteen months 
old. | | 

The rams are usually admitted to the ewes about. the 
20th of November, so that the season of lambing may com- 
mence in the early part of April. One ram is assigned tc 
sixty ewes. 

The ewes, during the period of gestation, feed on the 
natural pastures of the farm, but, on the falling of heavy 
Snows, receive a supply of hay, which may be spread upon 
the surface. But the Sheep have a wonderful faculty of 
collecting their food, even when all the ground is covered, 
by scraping away the snow with their feet, and they prefer 
this natural food to the dried provender. When turnips as 
well as hay are produced on the farm, the ewes receive them 
likewise during falls of snow; but it is especially at the 
period of lambing, and during its continuance, that this Spe- 
cies of food is supplied. 

When the period of lambing arrives, all the vigilance of 
the shepherds is required. Sometimes the ewes are so en- 
feebled by want of food, and the inclemency of the weather, 
that they have not milk sufficient to nourish their young, and 

: G 


98 THE SHBEP. 


then the maternal feeling seems to become extinct. But this 
latter accident is of partial occurrence, and it is rare that the 
mothers altogether abandon their young. Sometimes the 
lambs, at their birth, are so weak that they cannot rise from 
the ground, and thus perish. In such cases, the shepherd is 
at hand to assist the young to the teat, and often he takes 
the ewe with her young to a place of shelter, where they can 
be more carefully tended. When a ewe dies, and it is wished 


to give her lamb to one that has lost her own young, or when 


a ewe has twins, and it is wished to give one of them to be 
suckled by another whose own lamb has perished, some art 
is often required to induce the ewe to adopt the stranger. 
The most common method is to confine them together to a 
narrow space, holding the lamb to the teat until it has been 
suckled. In certain cases, when the lamb of any ewe has 
perished, its skin is taken off and put on the lamb to be 
adopted. The ewe, deceived by the smell of her own off- 
spring, suffers herself to be sucked, and from that time for- 
ward adopts the little orphan, and treats it with all the kind- 
ness of the natural parent. It is of painful mterest to see a 
ewe, whose lamb has perished, mourning over its little one, 
and refusing to leave it or be comforted. If the dead body 
is dragged along the ground, the poor mother will follow it 
even into the cot of the shepherd, fiercely driving away the 
dogs or sheep that approach it. Even when the ewes them- 
selves are in the agonies of death, they will be seen calling 
piteously to their young ones, and offering them the last store 
of milk with which Nature has furnished them. When the 
ewes have twins, and thus have two lambs to nurse, it is 
usual to give them a more liberal supply of food. It is held 
to be convenient to have an enclosure of early grass near the 
place of lambing or the shepherd’s cottage, to which ewes 
with twins, such as have too little milk, and such as are sick 
and infirm, or from any cause require more careful attend- 
ance than the rest of the flock, may be taken. Though va- 
vious ewes produce twins, it is regarded as a favourable cir- 


THE CHEVIOT BREED. 99 


cumstance in the case of this class of Sheep, in the more 
mountain districts, when one lamb can be reared for each 
ewe of the flock. It is thought to be well when eighteen or 
nineteen lambs can be brought up for every twenty ewes. 
The time of shearing these Sheep is from the middle of 
Juné to the beginning of J uly. The precise period is denoted 
by the wool being fully grown, and Separating readily from 
the skin when pulled. The Sheep are first washed, which 
is done by men standing in the pool, and washing each Sheep 
Separately, or more generally, when the flock is large, by 
causing them to swim two or three times through the water 
to the opposite bank. After being washed, they are kept as 
much as possible on ground where they can be prevented from 
rubbing on banks, or otherwise soiling their wool. In two 
days, if there be no rain, they are shorn, but it ig generally 
thought better to wait seven or eight days, in which case the 
unctuous secretion which protects the wool has again been 
formed. As soon as each Sheep ig shorn, it is usually marked 
with a stamp dipped in boiling tar thickened with pitch. The 


mark is made on different parts of the body, as the near 


shoulder, the far shoulder, the near haunech, the far haunch, 
so that the different kinds and ages of the Sheep may be 
known at a glance. | 
Soon after shearing the ewes, the lambs are weaned, which 
is simply effected by a short separation of them from the 
dams. The lambs are now, in the language of farmers, hog- 
gets or hogs, under the respective denominations of tup-hogs, 
wether-hogs, and ewe-hogs. The tup-hogs intended for use 
upon the farm or sale, and such of the ewe-hogs as are designed 
for receiving the male in the following year, are retained. 
The remainder of the ewe-hogs, and all the wether-hogs, are 
either now disposed of, or kept throughout the winter and 
sold in the following year, either, as has been observed, pre- 


vious to the period of shearing, when they are still hogs, or 


after having lost their fleece, when they are dinmonts and 


100 THE SHEEP. 


gimmers. Sometimes they are kept until they have yielded 
a second fleece. All the old ewes which have borne the re- 
quired number of lambs are disposed of before winter, and 
not only such ewes as are old, but such as are of bad form, 


or which it is wished for any cause to get rid of. The hogs 
which are retained are treated in the same manner as the 


breeding ewes, except that it is common to put them on 
some grassy and sheltered part of the farm where they can 
be best pastured. They receive hay in falls of snow, and, if 
possible, turnips are supplied to them during the whole win- 
ter, which may be done at the rate of a cart-load per day for 
every seven or eight scores. 

The practice of smearing the skins before winter with tar, 
was formerly in more general use in the case of this breed 
of Sheep than it has since become. It is now chiefly con- 
fined to the more elevated districts, or the more northern 
counties. The disuse of the practice has arisen, not on ac- 
count of any experience of its inefficiency as a preservative 
to the health of the animals, but on account of the injury to 
the quality of the wool, occasioned by the tarry ingredient. 
On this account, substitutes for the tar are now very gene- 
rally employed. These are, olive oil mixed with turpentine, 
impure naphtha, commonly called spirits of tar, or other 
substances, which serve the purpose of destroying vermin 
and removing cutaneous affections, but which are scarcely 
so efficient for preserving health as the old mixture. 

In the modern management of these Sheep, a principle 
observed is to suffer them as much as possible to pasture 
undisturbed. On this account the dividing of the stock of 
the farm into a number of flocks or hirsels, to each of which 
is assigned a certain range of pasturage, is much less used 
than formerly. The practice of folding Sheep at night, for 
the purpose of manuring parts of the farm, is now abandoned 
by all who are conversant with the proper management of 
this kind of Sheep. The practice, too, of milking the ewes 


THE CHEVIOT BREED. 101 


for several weeks after the lambs are weaned, is now very 


much given up, experience shewing, that the exhaustion and 
disturbance of ewes render them less fitted to withstand the 
privations and severities of winter, and to nourish their 
young when the season of parturition arrives. It is usual, 
however, to milk the. ewes after weaning for a few days, so 
as to run them dry by degrees. In cases where the practice 
of milking for several weeks is adopted, the milk is churned 
for the use of the farm; and twenty ewes will yield five 
pounds of butter in the week. 

The number of Sheep assigned to the care of one shepherd 
is from 400 to 500. When the flock consists wholly of ewes, 
this number is as much as one man can conveniently manage, 
but when the flock consists of hoggets and shearlings, one 
Shepherd may manage 700 or 800. An average allowance 
for one shepherd is 400 ewes and 200 hoggets. 

To the shepherd of these mountainous countries, the ser- 
vices of the Dog are indispensable. Without this faithful 
creature, his individual labour would be insufficient to collect 
the animals from distant parts, drive them in flocks, or per- 
form the other innumerable services required. The breed 
of Dogs used in the mountains of Cheviot, and the pastoral 
districts of Scotland, is of small size and homely exterior, 
but adapted in an eminent degree to the services to be per- 
formed. For Sagacity and fidelity, these humble Dogs cannot 
be surpassed ; they understand the language of their master, 
and almost seem to divine his thoughts. Their whole habits 


‘Seem fashioned to the life they lead. When taken from their 


natural pursuits, their spirit seems to droop, or at least they 
never manifest, in other Situations, that matchless Sagacity 
which distinguishes them in the occupation of the shepherd 
life. 

The entire management of these and the other mountain 
Sheep of the northern part of Britain, has no parallel, it is 
believed, in the same latitudes in Europe. In no other 


ps 


Fa OO ee — —— . 
“- oaeeninen = PORN AY BAO fa eeiieenate ~ — 
° 5 7 7 ona = we = = 


102 THE SHEEP. 


country, similarly situated with respect to climate, are the 
Sheep kept so entirely exposed to the inclemencies of the 
weather, without the shelter of pens and houses. The ab-— 
sence of Wolves is the cause of that freedom which is allowed 
to these mountain flocks; and the shepherds have been taught 
by experience, that the animals may be exposed by night as 
well as by day without harm. Were these Sheep managed 
as in other parts of the Continent of Kurope, penned and fed 
in houses, and prevented from taking their natural food, the 
mountains of the country could not, maintain one-fourth part 
of the present numbers. 

The great desiderata sought for in the elevated countries 
of these mountain Sheep, are the supply of food and shelter 
in winter. The essential food, when the ground is covered 
with snow, is hay; a field or more being formed, one of which 
is mown annually. Rough boggy ground, producing the 
rushes proper to the situation, as the sharp-flowered jointed 
rush or sprit, is suited for yielding a kind of hay, which, 
though coarse and comparatively innutritious, is eaten by 
the Sheep in the absence of other food. Where irrigation 


is practicable, watered meadows are sometimes constructed, 


affording the cheapest and securest means of supplying pro- 
yender in these elevated countries.’ In all cases a quantity 
of hay is provided, which should be equal to three months’ 
consumption, at the rate of one and a half pound per day 
to the breeding ewes, and one pound to the younger sheep. 
When whins grow naturally, they are preserved, as affording 
not only food but shelter. 

When the pastures consist of rough heath, it is common 
to burn it at intervals of several years, in the early part of 
spring. This, destroying the more shrubby stems, produces 
an increased growth of the more tender shoots. 

Draining is held to be very important in the countries oc- 


. eupied by these Sheep. The drains are narrow open trenches, 


a spade’s breadth in width. They are carried along the flat 


THE CHEVIOT BREED. 103 


marshy grounds, or along the declivities of hills, wherever 

water may stagnate. They are designed to allow a speedy 

egress to water on the surface, and the effect is to improve 

the pastures, and lessen the tendency to the dangerous malady 
of rot. vie 

When land exists capable of cultivation, the resources of. 
food may be greatly extended, for then turnips as well as 

hay can be supplied. But an error, too common in such dis- 
tricts, should be avoided, of ploughing more land than is 

required for the ends proposed. The purpose of tillage in 

such situations is the raising of turnips and clover hay for 

the supply of the stock; and this end being attained, the 

farmer ought never to carry his system of tillage further on 

a purely breeding farm. : : 

In order that the Sheep of these farms may pasture with- 
out disturbance, and that the labour of the shepherds may 
be abridged, it is held to be highly useful, and even neces- 
sary, that each farm be enclosed. The suitable fence for 
such situations is the stone wall, for the forming of which 
ample materials are for the most to be found on the grounds. 
This species of wall is formed of stones without the aid of 
lime, about five feet in height. Sods are sometimes used in 
place of stones; but the fences are greatly less permanent 
_and useful, and ought never to be formed where better mate- 
rials exist. 

The uses and value of shelter in countries so elevated and 
exposed are everywhere recognised. When natural valleys 
and glens exist, these are taken advantage of to shelter the 
flock from the piercing storms of the inclement season. In 
Such cases, the shepherd himself drives his flock to the places 
which afford shelter, and the Sheep of their own accord be- 
take themselves to the natural coverts of the farm. But 
though the instincts of the animals will cause them to avoid 
® coming tempest, by repairing to the lee sides of eminences 
for shelter, these are the very situations in which they may 
be overwhelmed by heavy falls of snow, which, when accom- 


SEE 


= Sn Oe Ne SENT Tree 


104 THE SHEEP. 


panied by winds, sometimes fill up all the hollows in a few 
hours. These accidents occasionally occur, and so sudden 
and violent is the storm, that whole flocks of Sheep are buried 
under masses of snow. Nay, sometimes the shepherds 
themselves, in their attempts to discover and save the scat- 
tered flocks, are bewildered and suffocated in the tempest. 
It is regarded as of high importance, then, not only to 
provide shelter against the piercing blasts of these elevated 
countries, but to afford places of refuge to the stock in cases 
of danger. Plantations of wood are always found to be be- 
neficial in these mountain farms, and when the means exist 
of rearing wood, may be formed with profit. They should be 
of the size of not less than four or five acres, so that the trees 
may shelter one another, and formed with salient angles, so 
that the Sheep may have shelter from whatever point the 
wind may blow. They are enclosed with stone walls, so that 
the trees may be protected from the inroads of the Sheep. 
The wild pine and spruce are found to be the best suited for 
the purpose, though the larch will grow in situations more 
elevated. But wood cannot always be cultivated in situa- 
tions so bleak and exposed, and a simple substitute is adopted. 
This is a small enclosure, termed a Stell, capable of contain- 
ing a flock of Sheep. It consists of a dry-stone wall, six feet 
high, and is usually circular, with a narrow opening, and 
may be made of a size to contain 200 Sheep or more. Into 
these places of refuge the Sheep are driven when occasion 
requires. They are thus protected from danger, and a stack 
of hay being placed at the entrance, or within the enclosure, 
they may be fed during the continuance of the snow. A 
sufficient number of these stells being placed in suitable 
situations, there exist places of security, to which the Sheep 
on different parts of the farm may be promptly conveyed. 
No words can convey to. those who. have never witnessed 
the scene, an idea of the terrible effect of the winter storms 


which ravage these alpine regions. In an amusing series of 
Tales, by James Hogg, commonly known as the Etterick 


eye 


THE CHEVIOT BREED. 105 


Shepherd, graphic descriptions are given of the scenes of 
desolation which sometimes present themselves, and of which 
the memory survives from generation to generation in the 
traditionary annals of the shepherds. Of one of these, fami- 
liarly termed the Thirteen Drifty Days, he thus speaks from 
tradition :— 

“ It is said, that for thirteen days and nights the snow- 
drift never once abated: the ground was covered with frozen 
snow when it commenced, and during all the time of its con- 
tinuance, the Sheep never broke their fast. The cold was in- 
tense to a degree never before remembered ; and about the 
fifth and sixth days of the storm, the young Sheep began to 
fall into a sleepy and torpid state, and all that were so affected 
in the evening died over-night. The intensity of the frost- 
wind often cut them off, when in that state, quite instanta- 
neously. About the ninth and tenth days, the shepherds be- 
gan to build up huge semicircular walls of their dead, in 
order to afford some shelter for the living remainder; but 
such shelter availed little, for about the same time the want 
of food began to be felt so severely, that they were frequently 
seen tearing one another’s wool with their teeth. When the 
storm abated, on the fourteenth day from its commencement, 
there was on many a high-lying farm not a living sheep to be 
seen. Large misshapen walls of dead, surrounding a small 
prostrate flock, likewise all dead, and frozen stiff in their lairs, 
were all that remained to the forlorn shepherd and his mas- 
ter; and though on low-lying farms, where the snow was not 
so hard before the tempest began,"numbers of sheep weathered 
the storm, yet their constitutions received such a shock, that 
the greater part of them perished afterwards ; and the final 
consequence was, that about nine-tenths of all the sheep in 
the south of Scotland were destroyed. In the extensive pas- 
toral ‘district of Eskdale-muir, which maintains upwards of 
20,000 sheep, it is said none were left alive, but forty young 
wethers on one farm, and five old ewes on another. The 
farm of Phaup remained without a stock and without a ten- 


106 THE SHEEP. 


ant for twenty years after the storm; and when at length 

one very honest and liberal-minded man ventured to take a 
lease of it, it was at the annual rent of ‘a great-coat and a 
pair of hose! It is now rented at L.500 a-year. An ex- 
tensive glen in Tweedsmuir, now belonging to Sir James 
Montgomery of Stanhope, became a common at that time, to 
which any man drove his flocks that pleased, and it continued 
so for nearly a century.” 

He continues: “ The years 1709, 1740, and 1772, were 
likewise all years notable for severity, and for the losses sus- 
tained among the flocks of sheep. In the latter, the snow 
lay from the middle of December until the middle of April, 
and was all that time hard frozen. Partial thaws always 
kept the farmer’s hopes of relief alive, and thus prevented 
him from removing his sheep to a lower situation, till at 
length they grew so weak that they could not be removed. 
There has not been such a general loss in the days of any 
man living as in that year.” 

“* But of all the storms that ever Scotland witnessed, or I 
hope ever will again behold, there is none of them that can 
once be compared with that of the memorable night between 
Friday the 24th and Saturday the 25th of January 1794. 
This storm fell with peculiar violence on that division of the 
South of Scotland that lies between Crawford-muir and the 
Border. In these bounds seventeen shepherds perished, and 
upwards of thirty were carried home insensible, who after- 
wards recovered. The number of sheep that were lost far 
outwent any possibility of calculation. Whole flocks were 
overwhelmed with snow, and no one ever knew where they 
were till the snow was dissolved, and they were all found 
dead. I myself witnessed one particular instance of this, on © 
the farm of Thickside: there were twelve scores of excellent 
ewes, all one age, that were missing all the time that the 
snow lay, which was only a week, and no traces of them 
could be found ; when the snow went away, they were dis- 
covered all lying dead, with their heads one way, as if a flock. 


/ 


ee 


A CHEVIOT BREED. 107 


of sheep had dropped dead going from the washing. Many 
hundreds were driven into waters, burns, and lakes, by the 
violence of the storm, where they were buried or frozen up, 
and these the flood carried away, so that they were never 
seen or found by the owners at all. The greater part of the 
rivers on which the storm was most deadly run into the Sol- 
way Frith, on which there is a place called the Beds of Esk, 
where the tide throws out, and leaves, whatever is carried 
into it by the rivers. When the flood after the storm sub- 
sided, there were found on that place, and the shores adjacent, 
one thousand eight hundred and forty sheep, nine black cattle, 
three horses, two men, one woman, forty-five dogs, and one 
hundred and eighty hares, besides a number of meaner anj- 
matls,”’ . 

After describing his return from a distant excursion through 
the mountains, and certain presages of a coming storm, he 


continues :— 


“I then went to my bed in the byre-loft, where I slept with 
a neighbour shepherd, named Borthwick; but though fatigued 
with walking through the snow, I could not close an eye, SO 
that I heard the first burst of the storm, which commenced 
between one and two, with a fury that no one can conceive 
who does not remember it. Besides, the place where I lived 
being exposed to two or three ‘ gathered winds,’ as they are 
called by shepherds, the storm raged there with redoubled 
fury. It began all at once, with such a tremendous roar, that 
I imagined it was a peal of thunder, until I felt the house 
trembling to its foundation. In a few minutes I thrust my 
naked arm through a hole in the roof, in order, if possible, to 
ascertain what was going on without, for not a ray of light 
could I see. I could not then, nor can I yet, express my 
astonishment: so completely was the air overloaded with 
falling and driving snow, that, but for the force of the wind, 
I felt as if I had thrust my arm into a wreath of snow. I 
deemed it a judgment sent from Heaven upon us, and went 
to bed again, trembling with agitation.” “TI kept my bed 


108 THE SHEEP. 


for about three quarters of an hour longer; and then 
rose, and on reaching the house with much difficulty, found 
our master, the ploughman, Borthwick, and the two servant 
maids, sitting round the kitchen fire, with looks of dismay, I 
may almost say despair. We all agreed at once, that the 
sooner we were able to reach the Sheep, the better chance 
we had to save a remnant; and as there were eight hundred 
excellent ewes, all in one lot, but a long way distant, and 
the most valuable lot of any on the farm, we resolved to 
make a bold effort to reach them. Our master made family 
worship, a duty he never neglected; but that morning the 
manner in which he expressed our trust and confidence in 
Heaven, was particularly affecting. We took our breakfast 
—filled our pockets with bread and cheese—sewed our plaids 
around us—tied down our hats with napkins coming below 
our chins—and each taking a strong staff in his hand, we 
set out on the attempt. 

“ No sooner was the door closed behind us than we lost 
sight of each other: seeing there was none—it was impos- 
sible for a man to see his hand held up before him—and it 
was still two hours till day. We had no means of keeping to- 
gether but by following to one another’s voices, nor of work- 
ing our way save by groping before us with our staves. It 
soon appeared to me a hopeless concern, for, ere ever we got 
clear of the houses and hay-stacks, we had to roll ourselves 
over two or three wreaths which it was impossible to wade 
_ through ; and all the while the wind and drift were so violent, 
that every three or four minutes we were obliged to hold our 
faces down between our knees to recover our breath. We 
Soon got into an eddying wind that was altogether insuffer- 
able, and, at the same time, we were struggling among snow 
so deep, that our progress in the way we proposed going was 
very equivocal indeed, for we had by this time lost all idea 
of east, west, north, or south. Still we were as busy as men 
determined on an enterprize of moment could be, and perse- 


vered on we knew not whither, sometimes rolling over the 


a = 


THE CHEVIOT BREED. 109 


snow, and sometimes weltering in it up to the chin. The fol- 
lowing instance of our successful exertions marks our pro- 
gress to a tittle: There was an enclosure around the house 
to the westward, which we denominated ‘the Park,’ as: was 
customary in Scotland at that period, and in that quarter, 
where a farm seldom boasted more than one enclosed piece 
of ground. When we went away we calculated that it was 
two hours until day ; the park did not extend above three 
hundred yards; and we were still engaged in it when day- 
light appeared. When we got free of the park, we also got 
free of the eddy of the wind. It was now straight in our 
faces ; we went in a line before each other, and changed 
places every three or four minutes, and at length, after great 
fatigue, reached a long ridge of a hill where the Snow was 
thinner, having been blown off by the force of the wind, and 
by this we had hopes of reaching within a short space of the 
ewes, which were still a mile and a half distant. Our master 
had taken the lead ; I was next him, and soon began to sus-_ 
pect, from the depth of the snow, that he was leading us quite 
wrong; but, as we always trusted implicitly to the person that 
was foremost for the time, I said nothing for a good while, 
until satisfied that we were going in a direction very nearly 
right opposite to that we intended. Ithen tried to expostulate 
with him; but he did not seem to understand what I said; and, 
on getting a glimpse of his countenance, I perceived that it 
was quite altered. Not to alarm the others, nor even him- 
self, I said I was becoming terribly fatigued, and proposed 
that we should lean on the snow, and take each a little 
whisky (for I had brought a small bottle in my pocket, for 
fear of the worst), and some bread and cheese. This was 
unanimously agreed to, and I noted that he swallowed the 
spirits rather eagerly, a thing not usual with him, and when 
he tried to eat, it was long before he could eat any thing. I 
was convinced that he would fail altogether, but, as it would 
have been easier to have got him to the shepherd’s house, 


pasa etnies 


os —— 1G as Heyy aaa 
Ba LY 


a a ne 
eigenen Sci et 
a eg ideas San aE TaD 


aoe aes SS eet es 


220 THE SHEEP. 


which was before us, than home again, I made no proposal 
for him to return. On the contrary, I said, if they would trust 
themselves entirely to me, I would engage to lead them to the 
ewes, without going afoot out of the way. The other two 
agreed to this, and acknowledged that they knew not where 
they were; but he never opened his mouth, nor did he speak 
for two hours thereafter. It had only been a temporary ex- 
haustion, however, for he afterwards recovered, and wrought 
till night as well as any of us; though he never could recol- 
lect a single circumstance that occurred during that part of 
our way, nor a word that was said, nor of having got any re- 
freshment whatever. About halfan hour past ten we reached 
the flock, and just in time to save them.” 

Again: “ It was now wearing towards mid-day, and there 


were occasionally short intervals in which we could see 


round us for perhaps a score of yards; but we got only one 
momentary glance of the hills around us all that day. I 
grew quite impatient to be at my own charge, and leaving 
the rest, I went away to them by myself, that is, I went to 
the division that was left far out on the hills, while our mas- 
ter and the ploughman volunteered to rescue those that were 
down on the lower ground. I found mine in miserable cir- 
cumstances; but, making all possible exertion, I got out 
about one-half of them, which I left in a place of safety, and 
made towards home, for it was beginning to grow dark, 
and the storm was again raging in all its darkness and fury. 
I was not in the least afraid of losing my way, for I knew 
all the declivities of the hills so well, that I could have come 
home with my eyes bound up; and indeed, long ere I got 
home, they were of no use to me. I was terrified for the 
water (Douglas Burn), for in the morning it was flooded and 
gorged up with snow in a dreadful manner, and I judged that 
it would be now quite impassable. At length I came to a 
place where I thought the water should be, and fell a-boring 
and groping for it with my long staff. No: I could find no 


THE CHEVIOT BREED. 111 


water, and began to dread that, in Spite of my supposed ac- 
curacy, I had gone wrong. This greatly surprised me, and 
standing still to consider, I looked up towards Heaven, I 
shall not say for what cause, and to my utter amazement 
thought I beheld trees over my head, flourishing abroad over 
‘the whole sky. I never had seen such an optical delusion 
before ; it was so like enchantment that I knew not what to 
think, but dreaded that some extraordinary thing was coming 
over me, and that I was deprived of my right senses. I con- 
cluded that the storm was a great judgment sent on us for 
our sins, and that this strange phantasy was connected with 


it, an illusion effected by evil spirits. I stood a good while - 


in this painful trance ; but at length, on making a bold ex- 
ertion to escape from the fairy vision, I came all at once in 
contact with the Old Tower. Never in my life did I expe- 
rience such a relief; I was not only all at once freed from 
the fairies, but from the dangers of the gorged river. I had 
come over it on some mountain of snow, I knew not how nor 
where, nor do I know to this day. So that, after all, what I 
had seen were trees, and trees of no great magnitude neither ; 
but their appearance to my eyes it is impossible to describe. 
I thought they flourished abroad, not for miles, but for hun- 
dreds of miles, to the utmost verges of the visible heavens. 
Such a day and such a night may the eye of a Shepherd never 
again behold!” 

No apology can be due for extracting those passages. 
Had the author never written more than his account of the 
storms of Etterick, he would deserve to be remembered. 
Even if we shall imagine that a little fancy has been mixed 
‘with the reality of the story, we must feel that the Shepherd 
Boy had really mingled in the scenes which he lived to paint 
80 well. One passage more is worthy of note. It refers to 
a faculty known to be possessed by the Dogs of these moun- 
tains, of discovering the Sheep which have been buried be- 
neath the snow. We know that a similar instinct of the 


SS ON TORT ae Spon a aoa aoe rane Serer epee Sc oo 


ee Tren neers nereenter 


————————— 


Pe 
112 THE SHEEP. 


noble Dogs of St Bernard, is employed to discover the re- 
mains of the perished traveller. 

« Next morning the sky was clear ; but a cold intemperate 
wind still blew from the north. The face of the country was 
entirely altered. The form of every hill was changed, and 
new mountains leaned over every valley. All traces of burns, 
rivers, and lakes, were obliterated.” ‘When we came to 
the ground where the sheep should have been, there was not 
one of them above the snow. Here and there, at a great 
distance from each other, we could perceive the heads or 
horns of stragglers appearing; and these were easily got 
out; but when we had collected these few, we could find no 
more. They had been lying all abroad in a scattered state 
when the storm came on, and were covered over just as they 
had been lying. It was on a kind of sloping ground, that 
lay half beneath the wind, and the snow was uniformly from 
six to eight feet deep. Under this the hogs were lying scat- 
tered over at least one hundred acres of heathery ground. 
We went about boring with our long poles, and often did 
not find one hog in a quarter of an hour. But at length a 
white shaggy colly, named Sparkie, that belonged to the 
cowherd boy, seemed to have comprehended something of 


our perplexity, for we observed him plying and seraping in 


the snow with great violence, and always looking over his 
shoulder for us. On going to the spot, we found that he had 
marked straight above a sheep. From that he flew to ano- 
ther, and so on to another, as fast as we could dig them out, 
and ten times faster, for he sometimes had twenty or thirty 
holes marked beforehand.” 

Although these dreadful tempests occur but occasionally, 
bad seasons, that is, seasons in which the ground is covered 
for a long period with frozen snow, are common, and never 
fail to affect, in a serious manner, the health and condition 
of the flock. When they take place at the period of lamb- 
ing, great numbers of the young creatures perish, notwith- 
standing every care on the part of the shepherds. 

6 


THE CHEVIOT BREED. 118 


The Cheviot Breed, naturalized in countries so cold and 
tempestuous, and spreading over so large a tract of country, 
must be seen to be of the highest economical importance. 
The attention of agriculturists, in the district proper to the 
breed, has been skilfully directed to its improvement. Su- 
perior feeding has had the effect of enlarging the size of the 


animals, and increasing the produce of wool; but the wool, 


as was before observed, has become less fine, and has almost 
ceased to be used in the manufacture of cloths. It has, 
therefore, become the interest of breeders to direct attention 
to the improvement of the form of the animals, holding the 
quality of the wool to be a secondary consideration. Never- 


theless, to this extent, attention to the wool is proper: a fine. 
and close fleece indicates constitutional hardiness in the in- | 


dividuals, and should therefore be carefully attended to ag a 
character in the breeding parents. 


The Cheviot Breed amalgamates readily with the Leices- 


ter; and a system of breeding has been extensively intro- 
duced for producing the first cross of this descent. The 
rams employed are of the pure Leicester breed; and the 


progeny is superior in size, weight of wool, and tendency to 


fatten, to the native Cheviot. The lambs of this descent are 
Sometimes disposed of to the butcher, and sometimes fed 
until they are shearlings, when they can be rendered ag fat 
as the parent Leicesters, and not much inferior in weight ; 
and further, they ean be raised to maturity under less favour- 


able conditions of soil and herbage than the Leicester. The | 


benefit, however, may be said to end with the first cross, 
and the progeny of this mixed descent is greatly inferior to 
the pure Cheviot in hardiness of constitution. The system 
is attended with considerable profit in many cases. The 
danger is, that it may insensibly produce a mixture of the 
Leicester blood on the breeding farms. Even this may an- 
Swer peculiar situations; but there cannot be a question 
that, for Seneral cultivation in the high and tempestuous 
countries to which the Cheviot breed is adapted, the race 
H 


ac — rere 


Seales aiei inne inna nine ial 


ENTS ew ES apeeenaieetre ee 


4114 THE SHEEP. 


should be preserved in its native purity. Every mixture of 
stranger blood has been found to lessen that character of 
hardiness which is the distinguishing character of the race. 
The beautiful breed of the South Downs would seem to be of 
all others that which is best adapted to improve the Cheviot ; 
and yet the experiments that have hitherto been made have 
shewn, that the mixed progeny is inferior to the native 
Cheviot, in its adaptation to a country of cold and humid 
mountains. 

The Cheviot Breed, it has been seen, has been gradually 
extending throughout the mountainous parts of Scotland. It 
has penetrated southward in the part of the central chain of 
elevated moors from which the Heath Breed has been derived. 
It might be yet greatly more extended in this direction, and 
supersede many of the flocks of ill-formed animals which in- 
habit this range. It has been carried to Wales, to the high 
lands of Dartmoor and Exmoor, and in small numbers into 
Cornwall. In all these cases it has been found superior to 
the native races.’ It has even been carried by settlers to the | 
boundless wastes of New South Wales; but the suitable 
breed for that country, in which the wool alone is of value, is 
the Merino, although, as we shall afterwards have occasion 
to see, some of the Lon g-woolled Breeds may, with advantage, 
be transported to this magnificent Colony. 


X.—THE OLD NORFOLK BREED. 


A remarkable variety of Sheep, usually termed the Old 
Norfolk Breed, occupies the higher lands of Norfolk, Suffolk, 
and Cambridge. These Sheep, once very numerous in the 
heathy districts of this part of England, are a wild and hardy 

race, well fitted for a country of scanty herbage. Both sexes 
are armed with horns, which, in the male, are thick and spiral. 


Their limbs are long and muscular, their bodies are long, 
and their general form betokens activity and strength. They, 


THE OLD NORFOLK BREED. 115 


accordingly, have‘ been regarded as well-fitted for distant 
journeys, and for bearing the rough treatment. of the fold. 
They hold their necks erect, and, in their carriage, resemble 
Antelopes. Their faces and legs are covered with short black 
hair: their wool weighs from two and a half to four pounds 
the fleece, is fine and silky, and possesses sufficient felting 
properties to fit it for being made into second or livery cloths. 
Tt formerly brought a high relative price in the market ; but, 
in consequence of the increased use of the finer wools of Spain 
and Saxony in the manufacture of Superior cloths, the wool 
of this, as of the numerous other breeds which formerly pro- 
duced short or clothing wools, has declined in value. 

These Sheep have much of the aspect. of the Black-faced 
Heath Breed, but differ from that race in their longer body 
and limbs, and in the characters of the fleece; their wool 
not being harsh and wiry, as in the case of the Heath Breed, 
but soft, and suited for felting. The softness of their fleeve 
gives them some affinity with the Southdowns ; but they 


differ from that race in their robuster form; and in their - 


bolder, wilder, and more restless habits. We must suppose 
that the characters of this breed have been acquired from 
peculiarities in the soil and climate of the district which it 
inhabits. This tract is calcareous, sandy, and naturally pro- 
ductive of heaths, with hard and wiry grasses. Being obliged 
to traverse extensive tracts to procure sufficiency of food, the 
animals have become active and muscular; and the country 
they inhabit being somewhat elevated, and exposed to dry 
easterly winds, they are furnished with a fleece sufficiently 
close to defend them from the chill breezes, without having 
that long coat of wool which is needed in situations more 
humid and mountainous. Inhabiting, too, a country in which 
chalk, and the detritus of chalk, exist, the wool has acquired 
that fineness which generally characterizes other races accli- 
mated in calcareous districts. This breed must be referred 
to the same general type as the Black-faced Heath Breed ; 
and we may believe, that the characters which distinguish it 


Ex 


116 THE SHEEP. 


are such as the Black-faced Heath Breed would itself, in the 
course of ages, assume in a lower country of chalk and heath. 

These Sheep were greatly esteemed in the districts which 
produced them, and were spread over a large tract of coun- 
try. Their mutton was, and still is, held in high estimation , 
| and they were valued by the butchers for producing a large 


sa | proportion of internal fat, and by the farmers for their adap- 


tation to the husbandry of the fold. They were long the 
prevailing breed of Norfolk and Suffolk ; but, as improve- 
ments extended, they became more confined to the higher 
grounds, and animals of more docile habits and superior fat- 
tening properties supplied their place in the cultivated coun- 
try. Other causes, also, have contributed to lessen the num- 
bers of this breed, and limit its range. With the more im- 
proved races, these wilder sheep produce admirable first 
crosses, either for being killed as lambs, or when of an older 
age. The ewes prove excellent nurses, and give birth to a 
robust progeny ; and no finer lambs are brought to the Eng- 
lish markets than the first crosses between them and the 
Leicester or South Down rams.. This circumstance produces 


a gradual intermixture with the blood of other varieties, and 


a progressive diminution of the numbers of the pure race. 
To such a degree has this intermixture taken place, that the 
perfectly pure Norfolk Breed is now becoming rare, and, if 
breeders have not inducements afforded them to preserve it, 
will soon eease to be found. It is to be observed, that the 
greater number of Sheep now brought to the markets of Lon- 
don under the name of Norfolks, are crosses, or the offspring 
of crosses, especially with the Southdowns. 

The Old Norfolk is thus sharing the fate of the various 
Forest and other breeds of this country, by giving place to 
races of superior value with respect to the power of arriving 
at earlier maturity of muscle and fatness. A certain feeling 
of regret may perhaps exist, that a race possessing many 
good properties, should have been extinguished rather than 
improved. That the Old Norfolk was, like every other breed 


THE OLD NORFOLK BREED. 117 


of Sheep, susceptible of an essential change of characters, 
cannot be doubted. While it might still have retained its 
property of hardiness and robustness, the too great length of 
the limbs, the flatness and lankness of the body, and, with 
the change of external form, the too great wildness of tem- 
per, might have been corrected, as in the case of every other 
race of Sheep to which the care of the breeder has been 
directed. But few breeders appear to have thought the Nor- 
folk so deserving of preservation and improvement, as to have 
deemed it necessary to apply to it those principles of breed- 
ing which have been successfully applied to’ other races. 
Very lately, indeed, the matter has occupied the attention of 
the possessors of the few unmixed flocks which remain ; but, 
unless these gentlemen are seeonded by more extensive sup- 
port than they have yet received, it is to be believed that this 
ancient race will, at no distant time, be merged in others which 
have acquired a higher value by the care of the breeder. 
The breed which of all others has the most trenched upon 
the domains of the ancient Norfolk is the South Down. This 
admirable breed has not only occupied districts formerly pos- 
sessed by the Norfolk, but has been largely used to crogs the 
latter ; and experience has shewn, that these crosses are su- 
perior in form, though not in weight, to those of the Leices- 
ter. This is a conclusion which might have been drawn even 
without the aid of experience. The Southdowns, which are 
a short-woolled race, and indigenous to a calcareous country, 
which is also the geological character of the country of the 
Norfolks, have a greater affinity with the Norfolks than the 
long-woolled Leicesters and Lincolns, and are therefore bet- 
ter suited to amalgamate with them. Ié has been seen, on 
the other hand, that the long-woolled Sheep of the plains are 
better fitted to unite with the Welsh, the Dartmoor, and Ex- 
moor, than the fine-woolled Southdowns ; illustrating a prin- 
ciple of breeding too often disregarded, of bringing together 
animals which possess a certain community of characters. 


THE SHEEP. 


XI. THE PENISTONE BREED, 


As connected with the Heath Breeds of the country may 
here be mentioned one of remarkable characters, termed the 
Penistone. This race inhabits a district of the coal forma- 
tion on the confines of Yorkshire, Lancashire, and Derbyshire. 
It is found in the higher parts of this district, where a coarse 
heathy herbage prevails, occupying a limited tract of about 
twenty-six miles by twenty. On the slopes of the hills, the 
older breeds merge in the crosses that have been made, 
chiefly with the Leicester. The Sheep are termed Penistone, 
from the market-town of that name, lying a few miles to the 
south of Huddersfield, in the West Riding of Yorkshire, and 
to which they are usually driven for sale. 

These Sheep have wool of a medium length, of a silky ap- 
pearance, but harsh and wiry, and weighing from four to five 
pounds the fleece. They have white faces and legs. The 
| rams exceed the size of the ewes and wethers in an unusual 
| degree; a peculiarity which is ascribed to their being taken to 


| the lower country to be reared. The rams alone have horns, 


which are very large, lying close to the head, and projecting 
forward. <A distinguishing character of this breed is an ex- 
treme coarseness of form, and especially of the extremities. 
The feet are large, the limbs bony, the shoulders heavy, the 
sides flat; but the most singular characteristic is the length 
and muscularity of the tail, im which respect the Penistone 
Sheep differ from all others in this country. This enlarge- 
ment of the tail is merely muscular and bony, and not at all 
analogous to the growth of fat which takes place in the tails 
of certain Sheep of Eastern countries. The mutton of these 
Sheep is highly valued for its juiciness and flavour. 

The Penistone is manifestly to be referred to the same 
general type as the Black-faced Heath Breed. It approaches 
to this race in the character of its wool, but differs from it in | 
its clumsier and less agile form. The individuals are very 


THE PENISTONE BREED. 119 


large, but weigh the least perhaps in proportion to their offal 
and bulk of body, of any sheep of this country. 

_ It may excite surprise that a breed possessing such charac- 
ters should have maintained its place in the centre of Eng- 
land, in the vicinity of some of the most opulent towns, and 
on the borders of districts the most celebrated for their 
breeds of Sheep. The Penistone district is, however, of 
peculiar characters. It is high, yet yields a plentiful coarse 
herbage of heath and intermixed grasses. It is scarcely 
sufficiently fertile, or sufficiently improved, for the Leicesters, 
and is just such a district as would appear to be suited to 
Support a coarse race of native Sheep. Farmers have found 
these animals to be hardy, and adapted to the country in 
which they are naturalized, and hence have been disposed to 
overlook their defects. Yet a gentle crossing with more 
improved breeds, might have corrected their more palpable 
defects, without rendering them too fine for their situation. 
It may be expected, however, that this coarse unthrifty breed 
will disappear, either by the effects of crossing, or by the sub- 
stitution of superior varieties. A breed which seems well 
suited for this district, at least so long as it remains in its 
present uncultivated state, is the Cheviot, which is calculated 
to thrive well in a country of heaths with intermixed grasses. 
Cheviot flocks have indeed been introduced into the Peni- 
stone district, but the farmers dislike them on account of their 
smallness of size, not considering that a greater number of 
these smaller sheep could be maintained, and would yield a 
larger produce of mutton with less of offal, on the same space 
of ground. The pure Southdowns would be out of place in 
these rugged pastures, which are not adapted to a race the 
natives of a country of short and fine herbage. Still more 
unsuitable are other breeds which have been employed to 
‘ eross these coarse animals, as, for example, the Ryeland, one 
of the prettiest little breeds in the country, but differing in 
all its characters from the Penistone. 


THE SHEEP. 


XII.—THE OLD WILTSHIRE BREED. 


The Old Wiltshire was a race of Sheep which extended 
over the greater part of the county of Wilts. They were 
the largest of the fine-woolled Sheep of England. Their 
heads were clumsy, and the outline of the face remarkably 
arched. They had horns in the male and female: their legs 
and faces were white; their wool was very fine, weighing 
about two and a half pounds the fleece: their mutton was of 
tolerable quality, and the wethers, although they fattened 
slowly, arrived at a good size. 

This breed was long regarded as well adapted to the situa- 
tions in which it was reared: its wool was in great request, 
and large numbers of the fattened Sheep were driven to the 
London markets. The breed may be said to be now nearly 
extinct in the pure state, scattered remnants of it only ex- 
isting. It has been entirely superseded by the South Down 
breed, which has either been directly substituted for it, or 
been made to cross it, until its distinctive characters have 
been lost. The vexation was very great of the older farmers 
of Wilts on marking the progress of the Southdowns, and 
the gradual disappearance of the race which they had been 
taught to regard as the best in the kingdom. Some of them 
declared that there would not be a pile of grass in the county 
if these little black-faced Southdowns were allowed to take 
the place of the fine tall Wiltshire. 

The figure of the Old Wiltshire affords an exemplification | 
of almost every external character which the breeder wishes 
to avoid. The large coarse head, the flat sides, and the 
length and thickness of the limbs, are very remarkable ; and, 
by comparing these points with the conformation of the 
beautiful race which is now reared in the same district, we 
- have an instructive lesson on the proper form of Sheep, and 
on the changes which the care of the breeder can effect. 
The Old Wiltshire breed, however, had become adapted, in a 


THE OLD WILTSHIRE BREED. 121 


remarkable degree, to the conditions, both natural and artifi- 
cial, under which it was reared. The animals lived in a 
country of chalky hills, inland, and not exposed to severities 
of temperature, but unshaded from the sun’s rays: the herb- 
age being scanty, they had to move to considerable distances 
to collect their food ; and the practice, from time immemorial, 
had been established, of driving them great distances to and 
from the fold. To these circumstances was adapted an ani- 
mal having a light fleece, with strong muscular, limbs, and 
with the habitude of subsisting on scanty herbage. Its fleece 
was not only light, beyond that of any other Sheep in this 
country, but its belly was destitute of wool, a character t ee 
which would not have existed but in the case of a warm dry! 
soil, where the animal did not require a coat of wool between 
his belly and the humid earth. The animal, however, which 
had acquired these properties was eminently deficient in 
others which are sought for in the more improved state of 
the Sheep. Subsisting on scanty dry food, he had acquired _ 
the habitude of fattening slowly; and the Old Wiltshire, 
though greatly valued by the butchers, was one of the most 
difficult to be fattened of the larger Sheep of England. 
There cannot exist a doubt of the great benefit which accrues 
to individuals and the country, by the substitution of the 
Southdowns for this coarse uncultivated race. It may be 
asked, Could not the Wiltshire Sheep have been improved, 
the faults of their form corrected, their size preserved, and 
the fineness of their fleece maintained? Beyond a question 
all these purposes could have been effected by the care of 
breeders, directed for a sufficient period to the improvement 
of the animal. But these are labours which would have re- 
quired a generation at least; and the interest of breeders 
was better served by taking that which was formed to their 
hands, than by waiting the slow improvements of a race so 
radically defective.* 


-* In my large Work, a representation is given of the ancient Wiltshire 


Breed unmixed with any other blood, affording perhaps the last record that ~~ 


122 THE SHEEP. 


The Wiltshire Breed may be regarded as the type of some 

- others which inhabited a portion of the midland chalk coun- 
ties of England until a recent period. The Old Hampshire 
Sheep may be referred to this group. They were horned, 
had the faces and legs white, though in some cases speckled, 
long limbs, and Jank bodies. This race has been supplanted 
by the South Down, or so crossed with it, as to have lost its 
original characters. The ancient Sheep of the adjoining 
county of Berks were of two kinds. One had horns, and 
the other was destitute of horns. Both were coarse slowly- 
fattening animals, tall and muscular, with an arched chaf- 
fron. Their wool was short, and fitted for felting. These 
breeds have been universally crossed with the South Down, 
and may be said to be nearly extinct in the pure state. Be- 
sides, few Sheep are now reared in the county of Berks, the 
farmers of which derive their Sheep for fattening from other 


ouneine aE 


districts. 


nn ams alee ae 


XIIIL—THE DORSET BREED. 


in inten 


A breed of Sheep has, from time immemorial, been na- 
turalized in the county of Dorset, which formerly extended 
over a large tract of country. These Sheep possess small 
horns, common to the male and female. They have white 


legs and faces: their wool is fine, but only applied to the 


making of second or livery cloths, and it weighs about four 
pounds the fleece. Their limbs are somewhat long, but 
without coarseness ; their shoulders are low, and the loins 
broad aud deep; their lips and nostrils are black, though 
with a frequent tendency to assume a fleshy colour. The 


will be presented to the public of a breed once so esteemed and celebrated. 
The individuals represented form part of a flock on an estate in the county of 
Wilts, bequeathed and held on the singular condition, that the proprietor 
should maintain a flock of the pure old Wiltshire Sheep. The former owner 
adopted this expedient for perpetuating the existence of his favourite breed. 


THE DORSET BREED. 123 


wethers fatten at three years old to about eighteen pounds 
the quarter. They are a hardy race of Sheep, docile, suited . 
to the practice of folding, and capable of subsisting on } 
scanty pastures. Their mutton is very good, but not equal 
in juiciness and flavour to that of the mountain breeds. f 

The property of the Dorsets which remarkably distin- | | 
guishes them, is the fecundity of the females, and their | ) ; 
readiness to receive the male at an early season. They | 
-have been known, like the Sheep of some warmer countries, _ Wil 
to produce twice in the year. This, however, is rare; but | 


they are nursing their young. They will receive the male 
so early as the months of April or May. The common 
period of admitting him is in the early part of June, so that 
the lambs shall be born in October, and be ready for use by | 
Christmas. This has given rise to the practice of rearing 
the lambs in houses, until they are ready for the market. 
The system has long been regularly pursued, especially with- 
in reach of London, where a great demand exists for this 
kind of luxury. The rams employed to cover the ewes for 
these early lambs are not usually the Dorsets, but the Lei- 
cesters or Southdowns, and chiefly the Southdowns. The 
crosses are excellent, and no better nurses can be found than . 
the Dorset mothers. 

The form of the Dorsets has a great resemblance to that 
of the Spanish Merinos. The resemblance, however, is 
entirely in figure, for the properties of the two races are 
very different. While the females of the Merino race are | 
bad nurses, the Dorsets are the most productive of milk of ¥ 
any of our races of Sheep. In the broad and deep loins of a 
this race, we have the same external character which, in the } 
case of the Cow, indicates the faculty of yielding abundant 
milk. The remarkable fecundity of these Sheep has given A - qi 
rise to the supposition that they are derived from some | i 
warmer country, where the females bring forth twice in the | . 
year ; but the property may be one which is due to situation, 


it is common for the females to become impregnated while | 
| 


oN ‘ 


mnaeeeretenerenene nanan 


casita aint 


& ee ee 


ie WE 


— 


124 THE SHEEP. 


The country of the Dorsets is calcareous, being partly on the 
limits of the chalk formation, and partly on the lias and oolite ; 
~ and the climate is mild, and the herbage is mixed with wild 
thyme and other aromatic plants. Formerly, the race was 
greatly more diffused in England than it now is. William 
Ellis, in his Shepherd’s Guide, published in 1749, describes 
the west country Sheep as having “ white faces, white and 
short legs, broad loins, and fine curled wool.” He says they 
are of different sizes, the smaller sort being fed on commons, 
and that they are more tender of their young than any other, 
and in an especial manner the Dorsetshire variety. “Where- 
upon,” says he, “those farmers that live in Hertfordshire, 


Buckinghamshire, Bedfordshire, Middlesex, Surrey, and 
Kent, and would be masters of a fine kind of Sheep, for 
folding, fattening, and breeding lambs, cannot have a better 


sort.” » 

Since the period referred to, however, this race of Sheep 
has been continually diminishing in numbers. The extension 
of the improved Leicesters and Southdowns gradually cir- 
cumscribed the limits of the ancient Dorsets; and in the 
- various midland and eastern counties in which they formerly 
abounded, scattered flocks only are found, and these rarely 
pure. 

The crosses of this breed with the Leicesters and South- 
downs being superior to the original stock, a powerful cause 
is in operation to produce an intermixture of blood; and 
were it not for the demand which exists in the great towns, 
and especially in London, for early lambs, the Dorsets might 
be expected, like so many of the older breeds of the country, 
_to become extinct. Should this take place, we know of no 
/ means of supplying its place, for no other breed of these 
Islands possesses the properties of early breeding and fecun- 
\ dity in the same degree. While, therefore, the rearing of 
early lambs continues to be profitable, care should be used 
in preserving the purity of this ancient race, and in calling 
forth, by selection of the male and female parents, those 


THE DORSET BREED. 125 


properties which it possesses in so eminent a degree. The 
purest of the race are now to be found in a district round 
Dorchester. ’ . 

The Dorset Breed extends to the rich and beautiful county 
of Somerset, where it is now reared in greater numbers than 
in Dorsetshire itself. It here exhibits, however, some differ- 
ence of character. It is distinguished frém the true Dorset 
by the colour of the nose, which is of a fleshy or pink colour, 
resembling that of the Merino. The Pink-nosed Somerset 
is larger than the Black-nosed Dorset, and of lanker form. 
The wool is somewhat longer, but nearly of the same fine- 
ness. ‘The wethers, when fattened, attain to greater weight, 
and the lambs are larger. The Dorsets, however, are consi- 
dered as exhibiting the characters proper to the females in 
greater perfection. In the case of the Somersets, the usual 
period of admitting the males to the females is about the 
10th of May, so that the ewes may lamb in September or 
early in October. : 

In both of these counties, especially in Dorsetshire, the 
Southdowns have been making continual progress, being 
either substituted for the native races, or employed to cross 
them. They are better suited than the Leicesters to mingle 
with the Dorset race, producing well-formed animals, and in- 
creasing the value of the fleece. | 

The numerous varieties of the same group which inhabited 
the older commons are now nearly extinct, although traces 
of the characteristic form may still be observed in certain 
places. One variety, however, is still to be found in a state 
of purity. It inhabits the Isle of Portland, where it has been 
kept unmixed for an unknown period. These little Sheep 
have horns in the male and female. They are gentle, and of 
good form. They have a tinge of dun on the face and legs. 


Their wool, like that of the Dorsets, is of medium fineness, 


weighing about two pounds the fleece. They are washed, 
before being shorn, in the salt pools left on the shores by the 
returning tide. Their mutton is exceedingly delicate, and 


126 THE SHEEP.. 


the wethers, when fat, at two years and four months old, 
weigh from ten to twelve pounds the quarter. 

The climate of the Isle of Portland is moist, and the natural 
herbage is largely mixed with wild thyme. The number of 
Sheep in the Island amounts to about 4000. Some years ago 
a flock of them was taken to the Derby hills by Sir George 
Crewe, M.P., and ‘it is said that they supported well this 
change of climate and situation. No purpose, however, of 
, economical utility can be served by carrying this curious 
| breed beyond the narrow limits where it has acquired the 


characters which are proper to it. 


XIV. THE MERINO BREED. 


From early times, Spain has been noted for the production 
of numerous flocks of Sheep, and of wool adapted to the 
fabrication of the finer cloths and tissues. This country 
presents great diversity of surface and natural productions. 
Towards the south and east it is more African in its charac- 
ter than any other part of Europe. The interior consists of 
elevated plains, bounded and traversed by long ranges of 
mountains, the summits of which sometimes rise almost to 
the region of perpetual congelation. ‘Descending from these 
chains of mountains are several noble rivers, which carry 
their waters to the Mediterranean and Atlantic through 
plains and valleys of surpassing richness and beauty. The 
climate varies greatly with the altitude, but the air is every 
where pure and dry. The vegetable productions are those 
of the warmer as well as of the colder parts of the northern 
temperate zone. The orange, the citron, the olive, and the 
vine, are common productions of the lower plains ; the rocky 
mountains are covered with cisti, arborescent heaths, and 
many beautiful and fragrant herbs; and, in the cultivated 
country, are mingled the plants of the warmer with those of 
the temperate regions,—the maize, the sugar-cane, the rice, 


| 
| 
| 


_ THE MERINO BREED. (127 


and the sorghi, with wheat and other cerealia. Numerous 


varieties of Sheep occupy the plains and mountainous coun- 
try. Some produce a long wool, deficient in the property of 
felting, but fitted for the manufacture of the looser fabrics, 
as carpets and flannels, as well as Serges and the lighter 
tissues. These long-woolled Sheep are found in the lower 
and more cultivated countries. The short-woolled Sheep in- 
habit, for the most part, the sandy downs, and the mountains 
and elevated plains of the interior, where a finer herbage 


prevails. They are altogether distinct from the larger Sheep © 


of the richer plains, although both have been largely mingled 


in blood together, and have produced a mixed progeny, which 


is very numerous. 

This fine country, so rich and beautiful, hag rarely been 
permitted to avail itself of its unrivalled resources. With a 
few happy intervals, the history of Spain is one of intestine 
troubles, of foreign wars, of civil intolerance, and religious 
bigotry. Its former inhabitants, apparently of the same 
great family of mankind which peopled Gaul and other coun- 
tries of Western Europe, were early visited, for the purposes 
of commerce, by Phoenician voyagers, and subsequently by 
the Samians and other Greeks, who were permitted to esta- 
blish towns on the coasts of the Mediterranean. These 
strangers at first contented themselves with their little mari- 
time colonies, and with the means of intercourse which these 
afforded with the native inhabitants ; but at length the Phee- 
nicians, with that desire of colonization which distinguished 
them, founded the city of Gades, now Cadiz, beyond the 
Gaditanian Strait. The natives, alarmed at this encroach- 
ment, prepared to attack the intruders ; when the latter, in 
an evil hour, called to their aid the Carthaginians, then the 
most powerful maritime people of the Mediterranean. Dis- 
regarding its allies, this ambitious state began, on its own 
account, a system of cruel conquest, penetrating through the 
very heart of the country to the Ebro, establishing fortresses 
and founding cities, amongst which was the noble city of 


Fh 


128 THE SHEEP. 


New Carthage, which to this hour retains the name of Car- 
tagena. In the year 216 B. C., the fatal siege of the city of 
Saguntum, situated in the modern kingdom of Valencia, gave 
rise to the memorable wars between Carthage and Rome, 
which ended in the destruction of the Carthaginian Common- 
wealth, and the supremacy of its relentless rival. In the 
meanwhile, the Romans pursued the conquest of the devoted 
eountry to which they had been called as protectors. But 
nearly 200 years elapsed before they were able to bring it 
under subjection. At length all Spain became a peaceful 
province of Rome, receiving in exchange for her independ- 
ence a longer exemption from the troubles of war, and a 
greater degree of public prosperity, than she has ever again 


been permitted to enjoy. Under the wise administration of 


Roman laws, Spain soon became the richest, most indus- 
trious, and most powerful, of all the dependent nations of 
the empire. It was during the period of Roman dominion, 
continued for more than 450 years, that this country became 
distinguished for her commerce, her agriculture, and her 
other arts. Some of her cities were reckoned amongst the 
most opulent of the ancient world; and aqueducts, bridges, 
and ways of communication, now in ruins, attest a degree of 
civilization and refinement to which, except under the partial 
dominion of the Caliphs, she never again reached. 

The Roman writers, in their casual notices of the produc- 
tions of this important province, speak of its wool as being 
greatly esteemed for its fineness. It is described as being 
black. Pliny the younger informs us that the finest wool, of 
a black colour, was brought from Turditania; and Strabo, 
who wrote in the reign of Tiberius Cesar, says, that wool, 
suited for the finer garments of the Romans, was brought 
from the same country. Pliny, while he mentions the fine 
wool of Turditania, states, that yet superior to it was the red 
wool of Boetica, that is, of the countries of the Boetis, now 
the Guadalquiver, forming the modern Andalusia, and part 


of Estremadura. The red wool of Boetica still remains, and 
3 


THE MERINO BREED. 129 


is probably the same as that distinguished by the ancients 
under the name Milesian, brought from Asia. I4 ig stated 
by Martialis, himself a native of Spain, to be of the colour of 
wine. It is long and very soft, differing entirely from the 
wool of Spain, now go celebrated, termed Merino. 

The Roman power in Spain terminated in the year of our 
Lord 456, and was supplanted by that of the Northern Bar-. 
barians. In the year 409, the Vandals, Suevi, and Allani, 


having forced the passes of the Pyrenees, carried rapine and 


desolation throughout the tranquil and happy land. The 
Roman legions, few in number, and fallen off in discipline, 
and the inhabitants become unwarlike from disuse of arms, 
were unable to make head against these cruel enemies, who 
did not, however, long enjoy their bloody triumphs. A nation 
of Goths, who had become the allies of the sinking empire, 


_ drew their swords for the recovery of Spain, and, after a 


Series of murderous conflicts, succeeded in restoring it nomi- 
nally to its ancient masters. The Goths were worsted in 
their turn ; but at length their king Theodorie, by one deci- 
sive battle, established a Gothic monarchy in Spain, an event, 
which introduced the feudal System in its rigour, shook the 
whole framework of Society, and has influenced the fortunes, 
character, and institutions, of the Spanish people up to the 
times in which we live. The term Hidalgo, or son of a Goth, 
became a title of distinction, and those privileged classes 
were established which have been the bane of the country 
ever since. During the long dominion of these Gothic princes, 
upwards of 250 years, civil and religious wars desolated the 
country ; and nothing can be recorded favourable to industry 
and the arts except that, towards the termination of this pe- 
riod, the enslaved country began again to enjoy Something 
like repose. 

The Gothic dominion was doomed in its turn to a terrible 
overthrow. In the year 712, the Arabs, then termed Sara- 
cens, having overrun the whole of Mauritania except the 
little fortress of Ceuta, landed a tumultuary army on the 

I 


130 THE SHEEP. 


shores of Andalusia, and in one great battle, fought at Xeres, 
decided the fate of Spain. They defeated the Christian army 
of a hundred thousand men, and, pursuing their victory, re- 
duced, in an incredibly short space of time, nearly all Spain 
to the dominion of the Caliphs, leaving the vanquished in 
possession of their laws and religion, under payment of the 
tribute prescribed by the stern tenets of the Koran. A 
remnant of the Goths, under their leader Pelagius, retired to 
the mountains of the Asturias, whence they were afterwards 
able to roll back the tide of conquest on the invaders of their 
country. ; 

The Moors, as the mixed races of Arabian and African 
conquerors were termed by the Spaniards, brought with them 
the arts of the East to their new country, and cultivated 
them with success during their long dominion. Although 
their possessions were at length divided into separate states, 
often at war with one another, and almost always with the 
Christians in contact with them, they brought the subject 
country to a high degree of prosperity and civilization. No 
people ever underwent so sudden a change of character and 
habits as the wild and fiery Arabs in the delicious country 
which they had rendered their own. They cultivated agri- 
culture, and brought the art of irrigation especially, to great 
perfection. They were skilled in the useful mechanical arts, 
and established looms, forges, glass-houses, dye-works, and 
manufactures of silk, cotton, paper, leather, and the like, in 
all their principal cities. They even cultivated letters and 
the fine arts, when all the rest of Europe was sunk in dark- 
ness. Their aqueducts, bridges, mosques, and other edifices, 
remain to this hour the monuments of a taste, industry, and 
skill, which their successors have never been able to equal. 
But that.of all their arts which the most interests us with 
relation to our present subject, is their woollen manufacture. 
They fabricated cloths and carpets, with serges, and the other 
lighter tissues suited to the warmer countries. In the city 
of Seville alone were many thousand looms constantly at 


THE MERINO BREED. Te 
work, and others of their cities were scarcely lessdistinguished 
for the same class of manufactures. The woollen tissues of 
Spain were then the finest in the world, and not only sup- 
plied the demands of luxury at home, but were carried to 


other parts of Europe, to Africa, and all the countries of the 


Levant. 

But the splendid dominion of the Moors in Spain had early 
begun to be circumscribed by warlike enemies, and at length, 
in the course of ages, passed away. The Christians, under 
their Gothic leaders, emerging from their northern fast- 
nesses, wrested back, by slow degrees, kingdom after king- 
dom; and, after the lapse of 780 years of heroic struggles, 
unexampled in the history of mankind, Granada alone re- 
mained to the Moslem conquerors of all their rich dominions, 
This, too, fell after a, gallant defence; the inhabitants being 
left, by treaty, in possession of their property and the exercise 
of their religion. The fall of Granada took place in 1492, by 
which time all the Separate kingdoms of Spain had been 
united, by conquest or inheritance, in the persons of Ferdi- 
nand and Isabella, so that Spain once more became a king- 
dom; and the discovery of the New World, with its bound- 
less treasures, seemed to render it at once the most powerful 
in Europe. . 

But the seeds of decay had been sown along with the Chris- 
tian triumphs. Ax one kingdom after another was wrested 
from the Moors, they were partitioned among the great seig- 
niors, and the system of feudal vassalage was established in 
its worst form. The powers conferred on these warlike feuda- 
tories were alike in Opposition to the rights of the people, and 
the prerogatives of the executive power. The laws were dis- 
regarded by subjects go powerful, and tumults and conflicting 
jurisdictions destroyed the peace of the country. Religious 
intolerance, and the usurpations of priestly authority, agera- 
vated the ciyil disorders ; and triumphs, which should have 
been hailed ag the harbingers of peace, did nothing to pro- 
mote the industry and happiness of the country. Ferdinand 


132 THE SHEEP. 


and Isabella, wise and -sagacious as their general administra- 
tion was, were embued with all the bigotry of the age in 
which they lived. They established the Inquisition, one of 
the most savage institutions which has arisen since the dark 
ages. This junta of sanguinary priests directed their ven- 
 geance against the Jews, in whose hands was the principal 
part of the internal traffic of the country. It has been com- 
puted, that, within four years after the establishment of that 
tribunal, six thousand of these unfortunate persons were pub- 
licly burned, and that a hundred thousand suffered every 
eruelty short of death. But it was against the Moors, who, 
in the days of their prosperity, had shewn s0 noble a for- 
bearance, that the rage of these merciless rufhans was espe- 
cially directed. No sooner had Granada fallen, than this 
unhappy race was doomed to all the cruelty and indignity 
which savage minds could devise ; and by degrees all the be- 
nefits of their industry were lost to the country which they 
had enriched. Such was the state of Spain when Charles Vv. 
succeeded to the fairest dominions that ever European prince 
had possessed. The history of his ambitious life is known 
to all the world. With the glory of his magnificent reign, 
the decay of Spanish power proceeded with silent steps. At 
the age of fifty-six, amidst the germs of future wars, he re- 
signed his crown to his son Philip, who, though not destitute 
of talents, never arrived at the reputation of his father. This 
cruel Prince was defeated in almost all his schemes of selfish 
ambition; and the treasures of America, so far from adding 
to the wealth of his country, destroyed its prosperity, by 
withdrawing the attention of the inhabitants from those arts 
which could give it true riches. The persecution of the 
Moors was continued by him with increasing atrocity. The 
fires of the Holy Inquisition continued to burn by his com- - 
mand. The resistance which this provoked in the victims, 
was the signal for further butcheries; and, in the reign of 
his successor Philip III., the ruin of the industry of the 


country was completed by the expulsion of the remnant of the 


THE MERINO BREED. 133 


devoted race. Those that survived had conformed to the 
observances of the Christian faith ; but they were now to be 
driven away like felons from the land. The pretence was, 
that, though Christians in appearance, they were Mahomme- 
dans in their hearts. Thirty days were allowed these vic- 
tims, above six hundred thousand in number, to prepare for 
their departure; after which it was death for any one to re- 
main. Spain thus lost, by acts of imbecility and tyranny, 
the most industrious of her population. The effects of this 
loss she never recovered; but, exhausted by wars, emigra- 
tion, and imposts, sank into a state of languor and impo- 
tence, which rendered fruitless the blessings that Nature had 
left her. The flocks of her mountains remained, but the in- 
dustry that gave them value was taken away. In place of 
the beautiful fabrics which the arts of her people produced, 
it is the raw produce only which is now exported, and thatin 
diminishing quantity from year to year. 

The Spanish Sheep, it has been said, consist of two general 
classes, comprehending’ (1.) those which produce long wool, 
and which are generally the inhabitants of the more culti- 
vated countries; and (2.) those which produce short and 
felting wool, and which are chiefly found on the mountains, 
elevated plains, and downs. Of the latter varieties of Sheep, 
greatly the most numerous and valuable are termed Merino, 
a word of doubtful origin, but derived from the adjective 
Merino, applied by the Spaniards to sheep moving from pas- 
ture to pasture ; whence, too, the word Merino, signifying a 
judge of the sheep-walks, and Merinadad, denoting the juris- = 
diction of the judge. Numerous conjectures have been formed — 
regarding the origin of this race of Sheep, so distinct from _ 
any other indigenous to Europe. It cannot, however, now 
be known from what beginning, or by what progressive steps, _ 
this remarkable race has acquired its distinctive properties. 
Spain appears to have been distinguished, in every known 
age, for the fineness of the wool of its Sheep, which we may 
reasonably believe to be due to the climate, herbage, and 


134 THE SHEEP. 


other physical circumstances of the country in which the ani- 
mals are naturalized. It is, however, a reasonable supposi- 
tion, that the Merino race, which produces not only a fine, 
but a remarkably oily and felting wool, has been formed by 
some mixture of other races with the Sheep indigenous to 
the country. It has been supposed by some that it is derived 
from the Oves Molles, or fine-woolled Sheep of ancient Italy ; 
but the evidence upon which this opinion rests cannot be re- 
garded as satisfactory. Columella, a native of the South of 
Spain, informs us, that his uncle, of the same name, intro- 
duced some of the fine-woolled Sheep of Italy into his Spanish 
farm; but he likewise informs us, that he procured some 
African rams, which had been brought to be exhibited at the 
public shows at Rome. How far these crosses affected the 
native breeds cannot be known; but the facts may lead, per- 
haps, to the conclusion, that the wool of Spain, although dis- 
tinguished for its fineness, had not attained the perfection at 
which it afterwards arrived. There is great probability that 
the Sheep of Northern Africa were mingled in blood with 
those of Spain during the long period of Moorish dominion, 
We have no accounts, indeed, of the importation of African 
Sheep by the Moors; but if Sheep existed in Africa capable 
of yielding wool suited to the manufacture of the finer cloths 
and tissues, it is certain the Moors would obtain them; and 
\ we learn from the chronicles of the Spanish writers, that one 
| at least of their own princes resorted to Africa for Sheep ; 
' and the illustrious Cardinal Ximenes, who governed the 
country during the minority of Charles V., is distinctly re- 
ported to have brought Sheep from Africa to improve the 
Spanish wool. It has been said, indeed, that we know of no 
race of African Sheep that produces wool resembling the 
Merino. Even if this were so, it would not invalidate the 
reasonable conclusions that may be drawn. The wool of 
the Sheep of Africa, like that of other warm countries, is 
mixed with hairs; but underneath these hairs is a short and 
downy fleece, and it is easy to suppose that, on such Sheep 


THE MERINO BRRED. 135 


being transported to a colder country, the woolly portion 
would be more developed, so as to afford a covering to the 
animal ; but, in truth, it is known, that exceedingly fine wool 
is found in the north of Africa, though the races of Sheep 
_ that produce it have not been discriminated by travellers, 
and that. there is a remarkable tendency in the Sheep of 
Africa to produce that copious oily secretion of the skin which 
distinguishes the Merino race from any other in Europe. 
The fine woollen fabries of the Barbary States are known 
over all the countries of the Levant, and are one of the few 
manufactured productions which these long-desolated coun- 
tries export. It has been the opinion of many, that the 
_ Merino Sheep of Spain have been derived from England. 
Stow, in his Chronicles, informs that « this yere’’ (namely, 
1464), “ King Edward IV. gave a license to pass over cer- 
tain Cotteswolde Sheep into Spain;” and Baker Says, 
“ King Edward IV. enters into a league with John King of 
Arragon, to whom he sent over a score of Costal ewes and 
four rams, a small present in show, but great in the event, 
for it proved of more benefit to Spain, and more detrimental 
to England, than could at first have been imagined.” From 
this slender incident it were idle to infer that the. modern 
Merino owes its origin to the Sheep of England, though cer-. 
tainly the resemblance of the Dorset breed of England, and 
particularly of the variety termed the Pink-nosed Somerset, 
would seem to be sufficiently striking to give some counte- 
nance to the supposition.. But the successor of King John 
of Arragon was Ferdinand, who married Isabella of Castile, 
and it was the minister of these Sovereigns who resorted to 
Africa for Sheep to improve the Spanish wool. Our early 
writers, who assign an English derivation to the fine-woolled 
Sheep of Spain, were probably ignorant that already Spain 
was in possession of the best wool, and manufactured the 
finest woollen fabrics, in Europe. Upon the whole, although 
authentic documents on the subject are wanting, there is a 
presumption that the Sheep of Africa were employed to per- 


136 THE SHEEP. 


fect the Sheep of Spain with respect to the production of 
wool. The Merinos exhibit certain characters, which seem 
to shew them to have been derived from some country warmer 
than that in which they were naturalized, and it was during 
the dominion of the African possessors of the country, that 
the wool of Spain arrived at its greatest excellence. 

The Spanish Merino Sheep are of small size. The skin is 
of a reddish fleshy colour, and the wool is white, although 
black or dun sometimes appears on the legs, faces, and ears. 
The forehead is covered with a tuft of coarse wool, and coarse 
wool likewise appears on the cheeks. The males have large 
spiral horns ; but the females are usually destitute of horns. 
Both sexes have a certain looseness of skin under the throat, 
which is valued by the Spanish shepherds as indicative of a 
productive fleece. The legs are long, the sides are flat, and 
the chest is narrow. ‘The fleece is altogether peculiar ; it is 
close, short,and unctuous, weighing, from these causes, more in 
proportion to its bulk than the fleece of any other known race 
of Sheep. From its closeness, it feels hard when compressed, 
but, on examination, the filaments are seen to be of extreme 
tenuity, and no wool has been found comparable to it for the 
property of felting. It is not annually renewed, but will con- 
tinue to grow for several years. 

The Spanish Merino Sheep, when we regard them as ani- 
mals to be fattened for human food, are of an inferior class. 
Their flesh is of indifferent quality, and they are of tender 
constitutions. The females are the worst nurses of any race 
of Sheep which inhabit Europe. So great is their defect in 
this respect, that in Spain half the lambs are killed in order 
that the ewes may be enabled to suckle the remainder, it 
being calculated by the Spanish shepherds, that the milk of 
two ewes is required to bring up one lamb in a proper man- 
ner. Abortions are frequent, parturition is difficult, and the 
|. ewes are more apt to desert their offspring than any other 
Sheep which are known to us. In these respects the Me- 
rinos resemble the ancient Oves Molles of Italy, which were 


ST: 


% 


THE MERINO BREED. 137 


remarkable for the delicacy of their constitution, their yora-_ 


city, unthriftiness, and inferior power of secreting milk. The 
same causes, it would appear, have produced the same effects. 
Attention having been mainly directed in both cases to the 
production of wool, the other properties were disregarded, of 
hardiness and the power of yielding fat and milk. 

The Spanish Merinos, although retaining a certain degree 
of wildness, are yet very docile in their tempers. No Sheep 


place themselves more unreservedly under the guidance of © 


the shepherds ; and, although late in arriving at maturity, 
and difficult to be fattened, they are readily satisfied with 


dry and innutritious pastures. When put amongst other \ 
Sheep, they keep together, generally on the higher grounds. | 
At night they form themselves into a circle, the rams and 


stronger sheep being on the outside, retaining thus the in- 
stincts which they had acquired in their native habitation. 
They are incapable of bearing the same extremes of cold and 


wetness as the hardy Mountain Sheep of Northern Europe ;" 


and yet they do not seem to be peculiarly affected by changes 
of temperature, which, doubtless, their dense fleece enables 
them to resist. ; 
The Spaniards, who by degrees subdued the Moorish king- 
doms, neglected tillage, and attended chiefly to their flocks 
and herds; and then it was that those immense sheep-walks 
seem to have been formed, which cover so great a part of the 
country. Writers of the middle ages speak of the large flocks 
possessed by individuals, amounting to thirty or forty thou- 
sand each. Whether it was found that the continued heat 
of the southern parts of Spain was less favourable to the fine- 
ness of the fleece, or whether convenience or necessity led to 
a change of pasture during the summer months, a practice 


was early established of driving the flocks of sheep to the 


cooler countries of the north in summer, and back to the 
Southern pastures on the approach of winter. These migra- 
tory flocks are by some termed Transhumantes ; while the 


a x 


“e bas in als i 


138 THE SHEEP. 


sheep that remain in the same district during the year are 
termed Estantes, or Stationary. 

The stationary Sheep consist partly of the larger sheep of 
the lower country, partly of mixed races, and partly of pure 
Merinos, which do not differ in any respect from the migra- 
tory Sheep of that name, except in the method of treatment. 
The stationary Merinos are reared where the district or farm 
affords them sufficient food during the whole season. They 
are most numerous in the central countries, where the pas- 
tures are less apt to be scorched by the heats of summer, as 
in Segovia, and the mountain ranges to the north of Madrid. 

The migratory Sheep have been reckoned to amount to ten 
millions, which is probably equal to half the whole number of 
the sheep of Spain. They may be divided into two great 
bodies ; those which are to pass chiefly into the kingdom of 
Leon, and those which are to pass further to the eastward, 
to Soria, or even beyond the Ebro. These great hordes of 
sheep break up from their winter cantonments south of the 
Guadiana, about the 15th of April, and proceed slowly north- 
ward. The rams having been admitted to the ewes in the 
month of July, the lambs are born in November. In the 
course of their journey northward, they are shorn in large 
buildings erected for that purpose. The western or Leonese 
division, crosses the Tagus at Almaraz. The easterly or 
Sorian division, crosses the same river further to the east- 
ward at Talavera, and in its course approaches the city of 
Madrid. Having reached their destination, they are pas- 
tured until the end of September, when they recommence 
their journey southward. Hach of these journeys, of several 
hundred miles in length, occupies about six weeks, so that a 
fourth part of the year is consumed in trayelling. The older 
Sheep, it is said, when April arrives, know the time of sett- 
ing off, and are impatient to be gone. In the ten or twelve 
latter days, increased vigilance is required on the part of the 
shepherds, lest the Sheep should break away. Some of 


THE MERINO BREED. 139 


them do so, and pursue their accustomed route, often reach- 

ing their former year’s pastures, where they are found when 

the main body arrives. But, for the most part, these strag- 

glers are carried off by the wolves, which abound along the 
course which the migratory flocks pursue. 

These migratory Sheep are divided into flocks of a thou- 
sand or more, each under the charge of its own Mayoral or 
chief shepherd, who has a sufficient number of assistants 
under his command. It is his province to direct all the de- 
tails of the journey. He goes in advance of the flock; and the 
others follow with their dogs to collect the stragglers, and 
keep off the wolves, which prowl in the distance, migrating 
with the flock. A few mules or asses accompany the caval- 
cade, carrying the simple necessaries of the shepherds, and 
the materials for forming the nightly folds. In these folds 
the Sheep are penned throughout the night, surrounded by 
the faithful Dogs, which give notice of the approach of danger. 

When the Sheep arrive ‘at the Esquileos, or shearing- 
houses, which is in the early part of their journey north- 
ward, a sufficient number of shearers are in attendance to 
shear a thousand or more in a day. The Esquileos consist 
of two large rude rooms, with a low narrow hut adjoining 
termed the sweating-house. The Sheep are driven into one 
of the large rooms, and such of them as are to be shorn on 
the following day are forced into the long narrow hut as 
close as they can be packed, where they are kept all the 
night. They undergo in this state a great perspiration, the 
effect of which is to soften the hard unctuous matter which 
has collected on the fleece. They are then shorn without 
any previous washing, and the wool is left in the Esquileo, 
where it is sorted, and made ready for sale. By this ar- 
rangement 1000 Sheep or more are shorn, with the delay of 
only a single day. 

The Shepherds employed in tending these Sheep-are cal- 
culated to amount to 50, 000, which, supposing there to be 
ten millions of Sheep, is at the rate of 200 to cach shepherd. 


140 THE SHEEP. 


The number of Dogs is calculated at 30,000. These shep- 
herds form a peculiar class of men, strongly attached to 
their pursuit, and living in a state of great simplicity. Their 
food is chiefly dark bread, oil, and garlick. They eat the 
mutton of their Sheep, when they die or meet with accidents. 
In travelling they sleep on the ground, wrapping themselves 
in their cloaks; and in winter they construct rude huts to 
afford shelter. They seldom, it is said, change their calling. 

The whole of this extraordinary system is regulated by a 
set of laws; and an especial tribunal, termed the Mesta, 
exists for the protection of the privileges of the parties hav- 
ing the right of way and pasturage. . These parties claim 


the right of pasturage on all the open and common land that 


lies in their way, a path of ninety paces wide through the 
enclosed and cultivated country, and various rights and im- 
munities connected with the pasturage of the flocks. The 
system is opposed to the true interests of Spain. A change 
of pasture may be required for the flocks in the drier coun- 
tries at certain seasons, but the periodical migration of so 
great a body of Sheep cannot be necessary to the extent to 
which it takes place. Enormous abuses are committed on 
the cultivated country as they pass along. A fourth part of 
the year consumed in travelling, must be prejudicial to the 
health of the animals in a greater degree than the benefits 
they derive from a change of pasturage. A prodigious mor- 
tality accordingly takes place amongst these Sheep; and more 
than half the lambs, it is said, are voluntarily killed, in order 
that the others may be brought to maturity. The sale of the 
lamb-skins, which form a subject of export to other countries, 
is indeed a source of profit, but nothing equal to what the 
rearing of the animals to their state of maturity would pro- 
duce. That these extensive migrations are necessary to 
preserve the fineness of the wool, is conceived to be an error. 
Attention to breeding and rearing would more certainly pro- 
duce this effect than a violent change of place. In Spain 
itself there are numerous flocks of stationary Merinos, whose _ 


_enheiatiiainhideeenta ene 


THE MERINO BREED. 141 


wool is of all the fineness required ; and in other countries of 
Europe, where the Sheep are never moved off the farms that 
produce them, wool is produced superior to that of the migra- 
tory flocks of Spain. But the system is of great antiquity, 
and is so riveted in the habits of this ignorant and intractable 
people, that it is likely to be one of the last of those ancient 
abuses which will yield to the desire of change, which at this 
moment agitates the feelings of men in this distracted country. 

The Spaniards long preserved the monopoly of this race 
of Sheep with jealous care; but other countries at length 
were able to carry off the Golden Fleece of Spain, and the 
Merino race is now spread over a great part of Europe. It 
has been carried to North America, to the southern extre- 
mity of Africa, and to the boundless plains of New Holland, 
in all of which places it has been found to retain, with won- 
derful constancy, the characters which had been imprinted 
on it in its native pastures, and in certain cases to surpass in 
useful properties that of the parent stock. The first country, 
it is believed, which acquired the pure Merinos, was Sweden. 
In 1723, M. Alstroemer, a spirited and patriotic individual, 
was enabled to import a small flock of pure Merinos. In 
1793, the Swedish:Government entered with zeal into the 
plan, established an agricultural school under the superin- 
tendence of M. Alstroemer, and used every means to extend 
the breed. The measures adopted succeeded, to the degree 


of diminishing the importation of short wool, and increasing , 


the manufacture of the finer cloths; and, after the lapse of 


more than a century, the stranger race produces wool nearly | 
as soft and fine as at its first importation. The Sheep are | 


housed during the six months of winter, and generally during 
the nights in summer; and it is by means of this artificial 
treatment that the wool preserves its original properties. 
The ewes are between two and three years old before they 
are suffered to breed, and seven years old before they are 
fattened for the butcher. They are far inferior in hardiness 


oie TE oe sears 


142 THE SHEEP. 


to the native races; and, if due attention were paid to the 
cultivation of the latter, it may be questioned if they would 
not be of superior economical value to the breeders. It is 
supposed that there are about 100,000 of the pure and mixed 
Merinos in Sweden, reckoned to be about 1-25th part of the 
Sheep of the country. 

France, although in contact with Spain on the Pyrenees, 
did not attempt to acquire the Merino race until some time 
before the middle of last century, when the illustrious Col- 
bert, pursuing his numerous plans for extending the arts and 
commerce of France, brought several Merinos across the 
mountains for the purpose of improving the native Sheep. 
His plan, though well devised, was opposed by the prejudices 
of the people, and entirely failed. But in the year 1786, the 
French Government, adopting the same design, imported a 
considerable flook of pure Merinos, and established them at 

the royal farm of Rambouillet, near Paris, where their de- 
scendants yet remain. Every means were used to. extend 
the breed amongst the agriculturists of France, but with 
little comparative success. In 1796 the Directory of the 
French Republic took yet more active means to multiply the 
breed. By a secret article in the treaty of Bale, they obtained 
power to import from Spain 100 rams and 1000 ewes annu- 
ally for five years. The Spanish Government quickly re- 
pented of this forced concession, and political events pre- 
vented the completion of the scheme, so that, of the stipulated 
number, only 2000 rams and ewes reached their destination. 
Napoleon resumed the project, and during his reign many 
Merinos were brought across the frontiers. In this manner 
have been introduced a great number of Merinos into France, 
which have either remained pure, or been employed to cross 
the native races. But, upon the whole, France has not been 
very successful in this branch of husbandry. Although the 
climate and soil of France are eminently suited to the pro- 
duction of fine wool, the minute division of property in land, - 


THE MERINO BREED. 1438 


the small extent of sheep pastures, and the habits of the 
peasantry, have not been favourable to any general system» 
of improvement applied to this race of Sheep. | 

It is in the German States that the Merino race has been 
the most widely diffused, and the most successfully culti- 
vated. The Elector of Saxony, on the close of the Seven 
Years’ War in 1765, obtained from the King of Spain 100 
Merino rams and 200 ewes, taken from the best flocks of 
Spain. He kept them partly pure on his own farms near 
Dresden, and he partly distributed them throughout the 
country, for the improvement of the native Saxon Sheep. It 
was soon found that the race preserved all its properties, 
and was capable, under skilful treatment, and by due selec- 
tion of the breeding parents, of surpassing, in the excellence 
of the fleece, the stock from which it had been derived. The 
most judicious means were employed to extend this branch 
of husbandry, by the establishment of schools for the instruc- 
tion of shepherds, by the circulation of tracts, and otherwise, 
and very soon the wools of Saxony became the finest in 
Europe. The Saxon sheep-masters bestow a care in the | 
selection of the Sheep producing the finest wool, which has 
no parallel in any other country. The best are reserved 
| for propagating the race, and by this means the characters 
| which indicate the property of producing fine wool, are main- 
| tained or increased in the progeny. This is an application | 

of the true principles of breeding; and the care with which | 
the system is pursued, is the main cause of that unrivalled 
| _ excellence to which the fine-woolled Sheep of Saxony have | 
attained. The Sheep are kept in houses during the winter ; 
and the general treatment of them, with respect to food, is 
adapted to promote the fineness of the fleece, the production 
of mutton being regarded as of secondary moment. 

Prussia followed Saxony in the same course of improve- 
ment. In the year 1768, M. Fink, near Halle, in the Duchy 
of Magdeburg, introduced some Saxo-Merino Sheep, and ten 
years later several pure Merinos from Spain. His endea- 


144 THE SHEEP. 


vours to improve the Sheep of the country attracted at length 
the notice of the Prussian Government, and, in 1786, Frede- 
rick the Great imported direct from Spain 100 rams and 200 
ewes of the pure Merino Breed. The greater part of this 
imported flock died near Berlin of various maladies; and 
those that were sent to distant parts of the country degene- 
rated, through the carelessness and want of skill of those to 
whom they were entrusted. M. Fink was commissioned to 
make a second purchase of 1000 pure Merinos; and agricul- 
tural schools were established, under the superintendance of 
M. Fink himself, for the instruction of shepherds, and for 
disseminating a knowledge of the method of treatment of the 
Sheep. These endeavours were successful, to the extent of 
improving, by the admixture of blood, the native races, and 
shewed that the pure Merinos could be reared in Prussia 
without deterioration of the properties of the fleece. The 
animals are chiefly fed on hay, straw, and corn; and the 
Same precautions are used as are necessary in other north- 
ern countries for protecting the Sheep from the inclemencies 
of the weather. A considerable number of Merinos of pure 


and mixed races are now produced in the Prussian States. 
The wool of Silesia, in particular, stands in the first rank, 
and has been made greatly to surpass that of the finest of 


the migratory Sheep of Spain. 

Austria early pursued the same course which had been 
followed elsewhere. In 1775, the Empress Maria Theresa 
imported into Hungary 300 Merinos, and established them 
at the imperial farm of Meropail. A school for farmers and 
shepherds was established, and printed instructions were 
issued, regarding the nature of the wool, and the methods of 
treatment to be adopted. Subsequent importations were 
made, and now a large proportion of the Sheep of Hungary 
are either pure Merinos, or Merinos mixed in blood with the 
indigenous races. The enormous estates of the Hungarian 
nobles, whatever may be their effect on general industry, are 
well adapted to the husbandry of Sheep ; and this country | 


sf) 


THE MERINO BREED. 145 


can now boast of wool equalling in fineness that of the 
mountains of Spain. In Bohemia, and almost all the other 
Austrian States, Merinos have been introduced, and every- 
where have been seen to equal or surpass the parent stock. 
In Wurtemberg, Hanover, Bavaria, and other countries of 
Germany, the same means have been employed with suc- 
cess, to introduce the Merino race. It has been carried to 
Denmark and Norway, to Poland and Switzerland, and to the 
dominions of Russia, especially on the Black Sea, where a 
climate exists calculated to bring every natural production 
to excellence. The Merino race has thus been naturalized 
over the greater part of Europe, from Scandinavia to the 
Crimea; and Spain can never more possess the monopoly of 
a production which had descended to her as an inheritance 
for so many ages. The experiments shew, that a certain 
class of characters having been imprinted on a breed of ani- 
mals, these characters can be preserved under very varying 
conditions of soil and temperature, by artificial treatment 
suited to the endg proposed, and by selecting, for the con- 
timuance of the race, the animaly in which the properties 
required are sufficiently developed. 

The Merino Breed, which had extended to so many coun- 
tries of Europe, was at a period more recent introduced into 
the British Islands. George III., a zealous and patriotic 
agriculturist, resolved to make a trial of this celebrated 
‘breed on his own farms, and means were taken to obtain a 
small Merino flock. This was done clandestinely ; the ani- 
mals were selected from the flocks of different individuals, 
where they could best be got; and were driven through Portu- 
gal, and embarked at Lisbon. They were safely landed at 
Portsmouth, and conducted to the King’s farm at Kew. 
The flock was bad ; the selection had been carelessly or igno- 
_Yantly made; and the animals being taken from different 
flocks, presented no uniformity of characters. It was then 
resolved to make direct application to the Spanish Govern- 
ment for permission to export some Sheep from the best 

K 


146 THE SHEEP. 


flocks. The request was at once complied with; a small 
and choice flock was presented to His Majesty by the Mar- 
chioness del Campo di Alange of the Negretti flocks, esteemed 
to be the most valuable in Spain; and, in return, His Majesty 
presented to the Marchioness eight splendid coach-horses. | 
This flock arrived in England in 1791, and was immediately 
transferred to the Royal. farms, while all those previously 
imported were disposed of or destroyed. 

On the first change of these Sheep to the moist and luxu- 
riant pastures of England, they suffered greatly from dis- 
eases, and, above all, rot, which destroyed numbers of them ; 
and from foot-rot, which affected them to a grievous extent. 
By a little change of pastures, these evils were remedied ; 
and, after the first season, the survivors became reconciled 
to their new situation, and their progeny seemed thoroughly 
naturalized, and remained as free from diseases as the Sheep 
of the country. The wool was from year to year carefully 
examined: that of the original stock remained unaffected by 
the change of climate, while, in that of their descendants, 
little degeneracy could be detected either in its felting pro- 
perties or fineness. | 

This experiment excited extreme interest throughout the 
kingdom. Various individuals endeavoured to cultivate the 
pure race, but experiments were mainly directed towards 
crossing the native breeds with Merino rams, in the hope of 
combining the fineness of the Spanish fleece with the econo- 
mical qualities of the English Sheep. With this design, the 
Merino rams were made to cross the South Down, the Wilt- 
shire, the Leicester, and the Ryeland ewes; and in some 
cages the experiment was reversed, and the English rams, 
especially of the Ryeland Breed, were put to the Merino 
ewes. Many distinguished agriculturists, Mr Coke, after- 
wards Earl of Leicester, Sir Joseph Banks, the Duke of Bed- 
ford, the late Lord Somerville, and others, prosecuted these 
curious and important experiments ; and the writings of Dr 
Parry and others brought the subject in a prominent manner 
before the country. 


THE MERINO BREED. 147 


In the year 1804, when the sale took place from His Ma- 

jesty’s stock, many purchasers, the advocates of the Merino 

Breed, came forward, and the Sheep were sold at high, 

though not at exorbitant, prices ; the average price of the 

rams being L.19, 14s. a-head, and that of the ewes L.8:15:6. 

In the following autumn, a similar sale took place at advanc- 

ing prices. Seventeen rams and twenty-one ewes were sold 

for L.1148, 14s., being at the average rate of L.30:4:6. 

At succeeding sales, these rates were maintained or increased. 

Tn 1810, thirty-three rams brought 1.1920, 9s., or L.38:9: 11 

a-head, and seventy ewes, at the average rate of about 

.37, 10s. 
In the year 1811, a society was established under the pre- 

sidency of the distinguished and indefatigable Sir Joseph 

Banks, with the express design of promoting and encourag- 

ing the cultivation of the Merino breed. Fifty-four vice- | 

> 4 presidents were named, and local committees established in 

| 5 almost every district, or county, of England. This Society, | 
the most influential, from its numbers and the agricultural 

skill of its members, that had yet been established in Britain, } 
pursued their task with spirit and zeal. Amongst other means 
adopted for promoting the purposes of this institution, was I 
the offering of premiums for pure Merinos, or for the crosses i 
with the native Sheep. Every thing favoured the purposes i 
of this patriotic band, and in an especial degree the unex- 
ampled prosperity of the landed interests of the country, and — 
the enormous prices of the finest class of wools, produced _by " i 
the events of the war. 

- Public opinion, however, and the practical judgment of 
farmers, had, even before this period, been reducing the pre- 
tensions of the Merino breed, and the mixed progeny, to the 
proper standard, as the subjects of economical culture. It | 
was found, that however promising were the crosses at first, . 
the progeny invariably fell short of the expectations formed. | 
They were Small in size, legs hardy than the British parents, 
and Scnerally of inferior-form. So perfectly have time and | 
experience confirmed these results, that there scarcely exists, 


wep en 


ig 
cert il 


Ga ny 


148 THE SHEEP. 


except in the hands of the curious, a single flock of the mixed 
progeny from which so much was anticipated. They have 
either been abandoned altogether, or the breeders have gra- 
dually recrossed with English blood, until almost all traces 
of the Spanish mixture have been lost. 

In place, however, of attempts to engraft the Spanish upon 
the English stock, other breeders preserved the pure Merinos, 
and this experiment was greatly more successful than the 
other. The naturalized Merinos have been found to increase 


in size, in disposition to fatten, in the power of the females 
to yield milk, and, by attention in breeding, to improve in 


the external form. The wool becomes longer, and loses some- 
what, though not much, of its tenuity, unless, indeed, the 
means are taken to secure the animals, as in Saxony, from 
cold, the necessary effect of which is to call forth a greater 
production of wool for the protection of the animal. The 
naturalized Merinos have never acquired the hardiness of the 
native races, and would perish at once on the mountains on 
which the Welsh, the Cheviot, and the Black-faced Heath- 
breeds, are acclimated. Nevertheless, analogy conducts us 
to the conclusion, that the Merinos are capable of becoming, 
by degrees, adapted to the climate in which they are reared. 

The objections to the cultivation of Merinos in the Bri- 
tish Islands are not that they cannot be reared, inured to the 
cold, and improved in form, with a moderate preservation 
of the characters of the wool, but that they do not, as a 
breed, equal, in economical importance, those of which we 
are already possessed. The wool, indeed, is the most va- 
luable and abundant of that of any race of Sheep that we 
can rear; but the wool is not the only profitable produce of 
Sheep in this country ; and it is by a combination of the pro- — 
duction of mutton and wool, that the interests of the farmer 
are best served. The breed is in the country, can be ob- 
tained by every one, and has been the subject of trial by the 
best farmers; and yet we see it almost everywhere aban- 
doned in favour of the native races. Did the British farmer, — 
like the Saxon, derive his principal profit from the fleece, 


Saaeeate eine ceaemeateeiaedtieetcanctomeaenee tater curamhenicammtanttce ete teen ee ee ea en ee ee ee Pe ne 
: " 7 rs Pe eS aw ae ‘ . . 


THE MERINO BREED. 149 


and little from the carcass, then he might cultivate the pro- 

duction of the one in preference to the other ; but this is not 

the case under the present circumstances of this country, and 

the British farmer’s interest is therefore different. He can- 

not afford to shut the animals in houses for half the year, for 

: _ the purpose of protecting them from the inclemency of the 

weather, in order that the wool may be fine; nor to feed 

them on hay and corn, in preference to the abundant roots, 

herbage, and forage plants, with which the agriculture of the 
country enables him to supply his animals. 

If individual interest does not admit of the cultivation of 
fine wool in preference to abundant mutton, and the adoption 
of a breed of inferior hardiness, early maturity, and fatten- 

t ing powers, so neither does it seem that the national interest 
I requires it. Spain, and other countries of Europe where the 
| fleece is more valuable than the carcass, are employed in { 
4 producing fine wool, and the extended commercial relations 
of England enable her to obtain it, in the quantity which her 
manufacturers consume, from all these countries. Even her™ | 
own colonies are now enabled to supply it in increasing ! 
abundance. Is it not better, then, that we should trust to -— 
commerce for the supplies of a commodity which can be | | 
raised more cheaply than at home, and devote our Sheep | 
especially to the production of that food with which no other ) 
country can supply us, contenting ourselves with a kind of {| 
wool which, though less fine than that produced elsewhere, 
is all required and consumed by the manufactures of the 
country ? : . 
The most distinguished breeders of Merinos at this time 
in England are Lord Western and Mr Benett, M. P. for 
Wiltshire. Lord Western’s stock is either Saxon, or has 
been crossed by Saxon rams; Mr Benett’s is pure Spanish, i 
and has undergone progressive improvement, by selection q 
of individuals of the same blood. The number of his flock | 
| amounted at one time to7000; but it was subsequently reduced i 
‘ to 3500. It was treated in the ordinary manner of Sheep in 


150 THE SHEEP, 


this country. Lord Western’s, it is believed, is managed 
more in the Saxon manner, with respect to protection from 
. the weather. Mr Benett’s fine flock, notwithstanding that it 
_had been thus acclimated, perished in great numbers in a 
severe winter some yearg ago, proving that the race had not 
yet lived sufficiently long in England to be perfectly inured to 
its cold and variable climate. Other gentlemen have imported 
Merinos direct from Saxony, and thus obtained at once the 
highest perfection of the fleece; but there is little reason to 
believe that their experiments will be more successful than 
those that had been previously made. Merinos have been 
lately carried in some numbers to Ireland, and may perhaps 
prove more advantageous than some of the existing breeds; 
but this will not shew the great value of the Merinos, but 
the comparatively little value of the races which they have 
supplanted. 

The Merino breed of Sheep has likewise been carried ¢o a 
different region of the globe, and been subjected to a new set 
of external agents. The great insularcontinent of New Hol- 
land, presenting characters, in its vegetable and animal pro- 
ductions, which distinguish it. from all other countries, has 
now received this important race, which has been found to 
adapt itself with the utmost facility to its new condition. 
The first European settlement in this remarkable country 
was made in the year 1788, when a party of English crimi- 
nals was landed in Botany Bay. To Supply the early colo- 
nists with wool and mutton, and establish a, permanent flock 
for their future maintenance, Sheep were imported from 
Bengal. These were the small hairy animals found in that 
part of India. It was soon discovered that these miserable 
Sheep improved in their useful properties by the change of 
climate and food. They became prolific, the hair diminished 
in quantity, and a fleece of ‘soft wool, though not of great 
fineness, succeeded. This simple experiment added to the 
many proofs before existing of the all-pervading influence of 
external circumstances over the form and characters of ani- 


THE MERINO BREED. 151 


| mals. The importation of Bengal Sheep was soon after 
followed by that of superior races from the mother country. | 
Individuals of the Leicester and South Down breeds were by 
degrees imported, affording the kinds which were wanted by 
the infant colony, namely, animals that should supply food 
rather than wool. This experiment was entirely successful, 
and the intermixture of the new Sheep enlarged the size, and 
increased the economical value, of the original race. The 
wool even of these crosses, notwithstanding of the most 
slovenly treatment on the part of their owners, was found 
equal or superior to the finest produced in the mother country ; 
and in twelve years from the first landing of the settlers, the 
Sheep of the colony had increased to upwards of 6000. The 

result of these trials, and the growing prosperity of the { 

settlement, produced a desire on the part of the wealthier 

| colonists to try the fine-woolled Sheep of Spain, which had | 

, been introduced into the British Islands. A few of this race. | | 

| were obtained from England, and the result, like all the pre- . 

vious experiments, proved the admirable adaptation of the 

country to the rearing of Sheep, and in an especial degree to : 

the production of a fine and soft wool. After a few crosses. 

with the existing race, the wool produced was found to be | 

nearly equal to that of the pure Merinos of Spain; and when 

the original race was preserved without intermixture, the 

wool became more fine and soft than that of the same race 

in their native pastures. Merinos were now imported direct 

from Saxony, and this experiment likewise was successful. 

Ai. When the breed was preserved pure, the wool preserved its. 

essential properties, with that increase of flexibility and-soft- | 

ness which is the distinctive character of the Australian wools. 

Some of the wool of these Saxon Sheep, when it had been 

properly cleaned and attended to, brought the highest price i 

of any other in the English market, and led to the belief, that i 

these rising colonies weré destined to supply the manufac-: _ | 

2 tures of England with wool Superior to that of any other i 

country. These expectations were formed chiefly in con- 


— 


152 . THE SHEEP. 


- sequence of the peculiar softness of these new wools, which 
fitted them to amalgamate admirably with the harsher wools 
of the country in certain manufactures. But although the 
best of the Australian wools still sustain a high character, 
they are not found to equal the Saxon, in fineness, and that 
peculiar property which fits them for the manufacture of 
cloth. This is indeed the consequence of the different con- 
ditions of the two countries. In Saxony labour is cheap, and 
an attention can be devoted to the improvement of the Sheep 
and their wool, which is impracticable in a thinly peopled 
country, where the want of labourers cannot be supplied at 
any price. Under such circumstances, there must be a rude- 
ness, of management inconsistent with the minute attention 
necessary to preserve and increase to the uttermost the valu- 
able properties of the fleece. The matter of surprise is not, 
‘that, under such circumstances, the Australian production 
should be inferior to the Saxon, but that it should so nearly 
equal it. 

The island of Van Diemen’s Land, situated to the south 
of New Holland, between the latitudes of nearly 41° and 44° 
south, enjoying a cooler temperature, and being more exempt 
from the severe droughts of the sister country, was settled 
by two ships which had proceeded from England with con- 
victs. The first destination of these persons was Port Philip, 
which they reached in the autumn of 1805; but it being con- 
ceived that obstacles existed to the establishment of a per- 
manent settlement at that port, they were carried to the river 
Derwent, where, soon after, Hobart Town, the capital of the 
new colony, was founded. Sheep of the defective Indian 
breed were soon afterwards introduced into the colony ; but 
it was not until the year 1820, that the cultivation of fine- 
woolled Sheep was fully established. A flock of 300 Merino 
lambs was imported from Sydney ; but, in consequence of a 
distemper which broke out amongst them previous to sailing, 
only 181 arrived at their destination in September 1820. 
These were distributed amongst the colonists about Hobart 


THE MERINO BREED. 153 


Town ; and, some years later, pure Merinos were imported 
from Saxony. Thus the basis of a fine-woolled breed of 
Sheep has been laid in this interesting island, although as 
yet the wool produced has not equalled in value that of the 
sister colony. ; 
The progressive increase in the numbers of sheep in these 
noble possessions is without example. In the year 1810, only 
167 Ib. of wool were imported into England from the colony 
of New South Wales. In 1820, the quantity had increased to 
99,418 Ib.; in 1830, to 978,336 lb.: in 1832, the quantity 
brought from both colonies was 3,516,869 Ib.; in 1838, 
8,067,243 Ib. ; and since this period the importation has been 
proceeding in a constantly increasing ratio. Other settle-— 
ments have been established on the coasts of New Holland, 
at Swan River, at Port Philip, and elsewhere; and more re- 
cently the tide of emigration has flowed into the lovely islands 
of New Zealand, which, however, being covered with dense 
forests, are less suited to the multiplication of sheep than the 
vast plains of New Holland. Thus, in regions almost un- 
known to the civilized world until within the memory of the 
living generation, are to be found the means of supplying the 
woollen manufactures of England with the raw material in 
boundless quantity ; and it is gratifying to humanity to think 
that the foundations of this great storehouse of public wealth 
have been laid, not on violence and bloodshed, but on agricul- 
tural prosperity, and the improvement of the fleece. . 
The attention of the Australian colonists has been natu- 
rally directed to the cultivation of fine wool ; but it is evident 
that there are limits to the profits to be derived from this 
commodity, both from the increasing production of the coun- 
try, and from the rivalship of the districts of Europe where 
the Merino wool is cultivated. It is a question, therefore, 
whether the colonists should not now direct attention to the 
long or combing wools as well as to the short or felting. It 
is probable that the long wools of England would acquire, in 
these favoured climes, the very properties which would benefit 


Lae, 


eee ee ee 
ee - easiness 


aid 


ovosernanegeteenaueeannnenadpnatersnytrreemararinmpenesnssismestiltestie nes 


yon 


154 THE SHEEP. 


them the most, and that the heavier fleeces of the Leicester, 
the Cotswold, and the Old Lincoln Sheep, would yield a larger 
profit to the wool-grower than even the higher priced Merino. 


‘But the two classes of Sheep should be kept entirely distinct. 


The Merino breed should be selected and cultivated with all 
the care which the state of the country will allow. Merinos 


of the pure race may be obtained in England ; but in num- 


bers too small to supply any considerable demand. They 
would be more conveniently procured from Saxony, proper 


_ precautions being employed in making the selection from 


flocks of established reputation. The best period for exa- 
mining the flocks is the month of J anuary, or even February. 


The cheapest mode of getting an improved stock is to pur- 
chase the refuse or cast ewes ; but the proper mode to insure 


the obtaining of them of the best sorts is to make a selection 
out of the good flocks of the country. Unless, however, the 
purchaser is a very good judge of the quality of the wool, he 


will require an assistant in the country, who, for a fixed 


amount per head, will.make the selection; and it will be 
proper for those who are to make considerable purchases to 
send a trusty person to the country. The price for refuse 
ewes is from four to eight dollars, at 3s. per dollar; of ge- 
lected ewes, from ten to twenty dollars, and of rams, from 
L.3 to L.20. Some remarkably fine rams even bring prices 
so high as from L.50 to L.200; but this great expense can 
never be required, except in the case of individuals who al- 
ready possess highly improved flocks, which they are desirous 
of bringing to the greatest degree of perfection. In the case 
of Australian settlers, it would be well for a number to com- 


bine and purchase a considerable number at once, as from 
1000 to 2000 ewes, with a corresponding number of rams. 
The best mode of proceeding would be, to collect the Sheep 
at Riesa on the Elbe, and ship them to Hamburg, & Separate 
boat being hired for the purpose. Shipmenty might also be 
made from Dresden. The precautions to be used in making 
these purchases are, to deal only with persons of known cha- 


THE RYELAND BREED. ; 155 


racter, and, as has been said, to obtain an assistant in the 
country to select the Sheep, and to send a trusty servant to 
take charge of them. The experise of purchasing and trans- 
porting the Sheep to England is not considerable; and when 
we consider the immense national importance of conveying 
to our Australian possessions the best of the race that can be 
obtained, it is to be trusted that the colonists will find it for 
their interest to resort to countries where the animals can 
be obtained in the greatest purity and perfection. 


 XV.—THE RYELAND BREED. 


In the tract of country lying westward of the Severn, and 
bounded by the mountains of Wales, there has in every 
known period existed a race of Sheep, of small size, destitute 
of horns, and noted for the softness and fineness of their 
wool. The part of England where this breed was long the 


most diffused and cultivated was the county of Hereford, a | 


tract of the old red sandstone formation, stretching from the 
confines of Wales to near the Severn. But the breed ex- 
tended into Monmouthshire on the south, into Shropshire on 


_ the north, and into Gloucestershire and Warwickshire on the 
east, occupying many forests, commons, and wastes. The 


variety reared in the county of Hereford wag generally termed 
the Hereford Breed. Sometimes it was characterized by the 
names of the places in which it was found in the greatest 
numbers or perfection. It was sometimes termed the Archen- 
field Breed, and sometimes the Ross Breed, from the south- 
eastern district of the county lying between the Forest of 
Dean and the Malvern Hills. But it became at length more 
generally known by the name of the Ryeland Breed, from 


certain sandy tracts formerly devoted to the production of — 


tye, Situated southward of the river Wye. 
We have no historical record of the derivation of this 
breed from any other country, and may therefore assume | 


\ 


156 THE SHEEP. - 


that it had been indigenous beyond all memorial to the dis- 
tricts which it inhabited. It may not unreasonably be in- 
ferred to be a variety of that widely-diffused race of soft- 
woolled Sheep which formerly extended from the mountains 
and islands of Scotland to the mountains of Wales, and 
which was probably in possession of the earliest Celtic in- 
habitants of the British islands. From its diminutive size, 
its patience of scanty food, and the lightness of its fleece, we 
may conclude that it was the native of countries of a low 
- degree of fertility, probably of districts of forest, which, until 
cleared of their wood, are always unproductive with respect 
to the nutritive grasses. The county of Hereford, it is to be 
observed, though now rendered rich and beautiful by art, 
was formerly covered with woods, and interspersed with ex- 
tensive commons and chases, which long remained waste and 
barren. We are not therefore to conclude, that, because the 
country is now fertilized, it was not formerly suited to the 
maintenance of a race of small Sheep. The nature of the 
wool of this breed, too, which was noted beyond any other 
for its fineness, caused the breed to be preserved unmixed, 
and with nearly its pristine characters, long after the county 
of Hereford had become capable of supporting larger ani- 
mals. 

The wool of the Ryeland breed was long regarded as the 
finest that the British islands produced. The ancient city 
of Leominster, being surrounded by a country producing 
this kind of wool, and being the market-town to which it was 
brought for sale, gave name to the wool of the country, which 
was termed Lemster Wool, or Lemster Ore. Drayton, who 
wrote in the reign of Henry VIII., when comparing the wool 
of the Cotteswold Hills with the lighter fleeces of Lemster, 
bears testimony to the superior fineness of the latter. Cam- 
den, describing the town of Leominster, « which,” says he, 
“was also called Leon Minster, and Lyon’s Monastery, of a 
Lyon that appeared to a religious man in a vision,” Says, 
“ The greatest name and fame is of the wool in the territories 


THE RYELAND BREED. 157 


round about it (Lemster Ore they call it), which, setting aside 
that of Apulia and Tarentum, all Europe counteth to be the 
verie best.” 

A method of treating the Sheep of this part of England, 
calculated to preserve and increase the fineness of the wool, 
existed until a recent period. The animals were kept during 
the night in large houses termed Cots, capable of containing 


from 100 to 500 Sheep. This practice was probably adopted — 


in early times, for the purpose of protecting the animals 
from the wolves which greatly abounded in the forests of the 
western counties. It may be supposed to have been continued 
afterwards by habit; but experience would shew that it was 
eminently calculated to preserve and increase that fineness 
of the wool for which the breed was distinguished. The 
animals in these cots were sparingly fed with pease-straw 
and other dry forage, a system eminently favourable to the 
production of a short and delicate fleece. 

The modern Ryelands, where they yet exist, retain the 
diminutive size of their progenitors. Their form is compact, 
and their mutton is juicy and delicate. They are gentle and 
well formed ; and they are patient in a remarkable degree 
of scanty fare. Both sexes are destitute of horns. The 
colour of the whole fleece is white, and the wool extends 
forward to the face, forming a tuft on the forehead. This 
wool is yet the finest produced in England. It is not, how- 
ever, equal in this respect to that of the Spanish Merino, 
nor so well suited, by its felting properties, for the purposes 
of the clothier, on which account, since the extensive intro- 
duction of the fine wools of Spain and Germany, its relative 
value has greatly declined. Further, the Sheep are of small 
Size, and inferior in economical value to the races which the 
country is capable of maintaining. Hence, the inducement 
to cultivate the breed has been constantly diminishing, so 
that it has now almost ceased to exist in a state of purity. 

The smallness of the size of the Ryelands led to innumer- 
able experiments in crossing, with the design of increasing 


158 THE SHEEP. 


7 


the weight of the animals, and in the hope of maintaining 
the fineness of the wool. The experiments failed, as might 
have been anticipated, with respect to the preservation of 
the quality of the wool, but succeeded in increasing the size 
of the progeny. But the system of crossing, which excited 
the greatest attention, and from which the most favourable 
results were anticipated, was with the Spanish Merino, soon 
after the introduction of that celebrated breed into England. 
Strenuous exertions were used by individuals and public 
associations to introduce the Spanish blood, and Sanguine 
calculations were made of the benefits likely to result to the 
woollen manufactures of the country. Time and experience 
have proved the fallacy of all these hopes, and left to agri- 
culturists an instructive lesson on the principles of breeding. 
The first crosses promised well; but, in breeding from the 
mixed progeny, it was found that, while the wool had become 
inferior to that of the Spanish stock, the hardy qualities, the 
goodness of form, and the aptitute to fatten, of the English 
breed, were impaired. The crosses became remarkably di- 
minutive ; and the whole labour of the experiments was found 
to have been thrown away. It was assumed that the Spanish 
Merino and the English Ryeland were the same race. A 
better knowledge of either would have shown that the two 
races were remarkably distinct in their characters; and that, 
if any of the English breeds were suited to this kind of 
crossing, it was the Dorset and Pink-nosed Somerset, and 
not the diminutive Ryeland. This species of crossing has 
been long in diguse, but numbers of the flocks in Hereford- 
shire and the adjoining counties still exhibit traces of the 
Spanish mixture. — 

Some breeders endeavoured to improve the native race by 
selection of individuals and superior feeding. The breed, 
however, was naturally diminutive, and numerous genera- 
tions of Sheep must have passed away before this radical 
character of the race could have been changed. The system, 
therefore, was resorted to, of effecting the end by crossing 


| 


: THE RYELAND BREED. 159 


with larger animals, as the Southdowns, the Leicesters, and | 
the Cotswolds. It was found, however, that scarce any of | 
our races of Sheep was with more difficulty amalgamated — 
with others than the. ancient Ryeland ; and a vast number of | 
worthless Sheep were long produced in Herefordshire by 
these crosses. A better course was found to be, to substitute 


at once the stranger stock which it was proposed to culti- 
vate. Numbers accordingly, chiefly Leicesters and Cotswolds, 
are now reared in the country, and the Ryeland breed is 
diminishing from year to year. The last great cultivator of 
the Ryeland Breed was Mr Tomkins of Kingspion, the dis- 
tinguished improver of the modern breed of Hereford cattle. 
Mr Tomkins persevered in keeping up the breed of his native 


county. He succeeded in communicating to it greater | 


symmetry of form, but he did not succeed in enlarging the 
size to the degree of rendering it of equal economical value 


with the races by which it has been supplanted. \ 


All the minor varieties of this once celebrated breed have 
partaken more or less of change. One variety, greatly dis- 
tinguished, inhabited the Forest of Dean, a tract of the coal- 
formation lying between the Severn and Wye. This tract 


_was formerly covered with one of the densest forests in 


England,—* So dark and terrible,” says Camden, “ by reason 
of crooked and winding waies, as also the grisly shade thereof, 
that it made the inhabitants more fierce, and boulder to com- 
mit robberies.” By the discovery of mines in this forest, the 
woods were gradually thinned, and at last nearly extirpated ; 
and it then continued to be occupied by a kind of Sheep, 
which, until our own times, were held in the greatest esti- 
mation for the fineness of their wool. The Dean Forest 
breed has now disappeared in the pure state, having merged 


in the crosses of all kinds that have been made with it. A: 


similar variety occupied the Malvern Hills on the confines of 


Worcestershire ; but here the flocks have likewise become 


a mixture of various races. In Shropshire were several 
varieties of the same hornless sheep, inhabiting the different 


160 THE SHEEP. 


forests and commons. The Chum Forest breed had wool 
weighing from 2 Ib. to 3 Ib. the fleece; and the Shawberry 
breed, sometimes called the Tadpole, from its diminutive 
size, had wool of extraordinary tenuity and softness. The 
mere remnants of these and other varieties are now only to 
be found; the admixture of the races of the lower country, 
or of the mountain breeds of Wales, having nearly obliterated 


the former distinctions. 

Thus, the finest-woolled Sheep of the British Islands may 
be said to be extinct as a breed. Their former value, arising 
from the adaptation of their wool to the manufacture of 
native cloth, has been lost. Commerce now supplies us with 
wool more adapted to the purposes of the clothier ; and other 
native races afford a material better suited, by the length 
and strength of its filaments, to the class of manufactures in 
which the combing wools are employed. These longer- 
- woolled Sheep are likewise fitted to yield a larger return to 
the breeder who has artificial food at command ; and hence 
the disappearance of the fine-woolled Sheep of the western 
counties, is merely the result of the better cultivation of the 
country, and of changes in the channels of commerce and 
manufacturing industry. 


XVL—THE SOUTH DOWN BREED. 


Of the breeds of Short-woolled Sheep which formerly in- 
habited the mountains, downs, forests, and less fertile dis- 
tricts of the country, some, it has been seen, were distin- 
guished by being of small size, by being mostly destitute of 
horns, and by having the legs and faces white ; and to this 
class is to be referred the beautiful little breed of Hereford- 
shire, and other districts west of the Severn, already men- 
tioned. But another class of breeds, still more diffused, is 
distinguished by the individuals having the legs and faces of 
a dark colour, and, in most cases, by the presence of horns 


2 


saga | 


THE SOUTH DOWN BREED. 161 


in both sexes. Under this class is comprehended the Black- 
faced Heath Breed, which, it has been seen, inhabits the cen- 


tral chain of bleak mountains which stretch from the borders 


of Scotland southwards. This breed has large spiral horns, 
has the face and limbs covered with black hair, and has a 
moderately short, yet harsh and shaggy fleece. But these 
characters, proper to the race in the more elevated moun- 
tains which it inhabits, yield to the influence of external 
agents, so that, as we recede from the wilder country, a 
change appears in the form and aspect of the animals, and in 
the properties of the wool. Westward of the central moun- 
tains, in the counties of Westmoreland and Cumberland, 
the wool becomes more soft, and the form of the animals less 
robust. In the Yorkshire Wolds, to which the same race 
formerly extended, there was an equal deviation from the 


parent type; and still more in the commons and forests of 


Derbyshire, Staffordshire, and other inland counties. As we 
approach to the confines of Wales, the Black-faced breeds 
approximate more to the characters of the Sheep of the 
higher Welsh mountains, the wool becoming more soft. Ap- 
proaching to the Welsh type are the Delamere Forest Breed 
in the county of Cheshire, and the Morfe Common Breed in 
the county of Shropshire. The latter inhabited a country of 
limited extent near Bridgenorth, on the Severn ; and, until 
our own times, was noted for the fineness of its wool. A 
similar race extended southward through Herefordshire, 
which, from the delicacy and softness of its wool, was reck- 
oned little inferior to the Ryeland itself. Turning to the 
great chalk districts of England, occupying the south-eastern 
parts of the island, there were likewise numerous varieties 
of Short-woolled Sheep, in some of which the horns, and even 
the dark colour of the face and limbs, disappeared. In this 
class are the Old Norfolk, still inhabiting the heaths of Nor- 
folk and Cambridge, the Old Wiltshire, the Old Berkshire, the 
Hampshire, and numerous minor varieties, which formerly 


possessed the various commons, and heaths of this part of 


L 


162 THE SHEEP. 


England. But, of all these varieties, now the most import- 
ant and generally diffused, is that which inhabits the range 
of chalky hills of Sussex, commonly termed the South Downs. 
The South Downs of Sussex consist of a range of low 
ehalky hills, of five or six miles in breadth, stretching along 
the coast upwards of sixty miles, and passing into the chalky 
lands of Hants on the west. In contact with this range of 
hills, is a tract of low cultivated ground, which is usually 
connected with the Down farms, although many of the latter 
have no vale or flat land attached. The herbage of these 
hills is short, but well adapted for the keeping of Sheep, of 
which vast numbers have, in every known period, occupied 
the pastures. Whilst the dryness of the air, the moderate 
elevation of the land, and consequent mildness of the climate, 
are all eminently favourable to the rearing of a race of Down 
or Mountain Sheep, the contact of the cultivated country 
affords the means of supplying artificial food in due quantity. 
It is this combination of favourable circumstances which has 
rendered these calcareous hills capable of supporting a 
greater number of Sheep than perhaps,any tract of similar 
fertility in the country, and has afforded the means to the 
breeders of applying the resources of artificial feeding to — 
their improvement. The original breed of the Sussex Downs 
was not superior to that of many other districts of the Chalk- 
formation; but the means of supplying the animals with arti- 
ficial food, which the geographical situation of this long and 
narrow chain of hills in contact with the richer country 
afforded, aided the breeders in applying to the improvement of 
the race a system of breeding and feeding, which has ren- 
dered the South Down Breed the most esteemed in the 
countries suited to it of all the Short-woolled Sheep of Eng- 
land. | 
The native breed of the South Down hills was of the 
smaller kinds of Sheep, with light fore-quarters, narrow 
chests, long necks, and long, though not coarse, limbs. The 
wool was short, fine, and curling, although not equalling in | 


THE SOUTH DOWN BREED. — 163 


delicacy and softness that of the White-faced hornless breed 
of the western counties, nor even that of the Black-faced 
varieties of the older forests and commons. Both sexes 
were destitute of horns, at least up to the times of which we 
have any records; but it is probable that the older race was 
possessed of horns, like other varieties inhabiting the same 
kind of country. The faces and limbs were covered with 
black hair; and a tendency existed in the entire fleece to as- 
Sume the same colour. 

The modern South Down Breed is destitute of horns in 
the male and female, has the face and legs of a dusky gray, 
and has the body closely covered with short and curling wool. 
While the general form of the older breed has been preserved, 


the too great lightness of the fore-quarters has been cor- — 


rected, the chest has been widened, the back and loins have 
‘become broader, and the ribs more curved; and the trunk 
has been rendered more symmetrical and compact. The 
limbs have become more short with relation to the body, or, 
in other words, the body has become more large with relation 
to the limbs. The neck retains the arched form characteris- 


tic of the older race, but has become more short. The wool | 


comes well forward upon the face, and terminates in a tuft 
on the forehead. The animals are docile in their tempers, 
and suited to the husbandry of the fold, which is yet gene- 
rally pursued in the Downs. They are capable of subsisting 
on the short herbage of the drier soils, and yield mutton 
which has always been held in great estimation. The wethers 
are usually fattened after having completed their second 
year, although individuals of superior flocks are often ready 
at the age of about fifteen months ; whereas the wethers of 
ae older breed were rarely killed until they had completed 
their third, or arrived at their fourth, year. . 

It is to the effects of careful culture, under favourable cir- 
cumstances, that the modern breed of the South Downs owes 
the!sup eriority which it has acquired over all the other Short- 
woolled Sheep of the midland and southern counties of Eng- 


164 : THE SHEEP. 


land. With the advancement of tillage, and the larger pro- 
duction of turnips and other succulent plants, the’breeders of 
Sussex had the means of treating their animals well while 
advancing to maturity ; while increased attention was given 
to the selection of the breeding parents, and to the conse- 
quent calling forth of those properties of form which evince 
the tendency to arrive at early maturity of muscle and fat- 
ness. The improvement of the South Down Breed began 
about the period of the American war, but it received its 
chief impulse with the commencement of the contest with 
the French Republic, and has continued progressive until 
the present time. Amongst the individuals most distinguished 
as the improvers of this breed, was the late John Ellman. 
This gentleman began his important experiments about the 
year 1780, when he acquired possession of the farm of Glynde, 
near Lewis, in the county of Sussex. He remained in this 
farm more than fifty years, during which period he directed 
his attention, in an especial degree, to the improvement of 
the native Sheep of the Downs. He pursued his system of 
progressive change with judgment, perseverance, and zeal: 
and he must be regarded as one of the most skilful and suc- 
cessful breeders whom this country has produced. He dis- 
played none of the too narrow selfishness which, it is to be 
regretted, appeared in the proceedings of his distinguished 
contemporary Mr Bakewell. He freely communicated the 
details of his valuable practice, and shewed himself to be 
entirely exempt from illiberal prejudices. He did not ex- 
perience the necessity of creating, as it were, a breed, but 
was contented to adopt the basis which was afforded him in 
the one already naturalized in the Sussex Downs. He did 
not carry any of his principles of breeding to an extreme, but 
acted under the guidance of temperance and judgment. He 
sought for the properties of health and soundness of constitu- 
tion, a8 well as for those of external form, and facility of 
fattening ; and therefore he did not, like Bakewell, confine 
himself rigidly to the blood of his own stock, but resorted to 


THE SOUTH DOWN BREED. . 165 


others, that he might infuse fresh vigour into bis flocks, and 
prevent them from becoming too delicate. His aim, in short, 
was the really useful ; and, though he reaped the due reward 
of his enterprise and skill, it was never obtained by arts of 
any kind, by deception, or useless ostentation. His charac- 
ter throughout was one of sincerity and manly simplicity ; 
and it is pleasing to add, that he closed a long and honour- 
able life, respected and regretted by all that came under the 
influence of his social virtues. He died in 1832, having 
entered into his eightieth year. 
Contemporaries and successors of Mr Ellman have pursued, 
with deserved success, the cultivation of the South Down 
Breed, which may now be said to be brought to all the per- 
fection, with respect to early maturity and fattening power, 
of which it seems to be susceptible. The system of selling 
and hiring out rams was early adopted, and is now exten- 
sively pursued by eminent breeders, who devote attention to 
the rearing of rams as an especial branch of their profession. 
This is a division of labour highly conducive to the perfecting 
of the breed, and the extending of it in its state of purity and 
highest cultivation to different parts of the country.. But the 
breeders of rams naturally rear the animals, under favourable 
circumstances with respect to the supplies of food; and thus 
a tendency is produced to an enlargement of size beyond that 
characteristic of a breed suited to a district of downs and 
short herbage. The appropriate localities of the South Down 
Breed are those which are suited to the lighter kinds of 
Sheep. To the richer and moister plains are adapted. other 
breeds, which produce a long and heavy fleece, and are the 
native inhabitants of districts of abundant herbage. Such 
are the Leicester, and other varieties of Long-woolled Sheep, 
to be afterwards described. Doubtless, the South Down 
. Breed may, by the stimulus of artificial food, and by being 
naturalized in a country fertile in grasses, become as large 
as sii Leicester and other Long-woolled breeds of the plains ; 
and it has been long making progress to this condition in the 


————— 


166 THE SHEEP. 


hands of the principal Sussex breeders. But the change is 

one which, in proportion as it may adapt the breed to a richer 

country, may render it less suited to those more dry and 

steril tracts over which it has been spread, and in which 

hardiness and soundness of constitution, and the capacity of 

subsisting on scanty food, are properties to be regarded as. 
much as the disposition to arrive at early maturity and fatten 

quickly. Nevertheless, the past efforts of the Sussex breeders 

to improve the breed, by rearing it in a more artificial con- 

dition than is suited to it, have hitherto been eminently suc- 

cessful in rendering it of more economical value. The earlier 

improvers of this breed paid especial attention to the fineness 

of the wool, which then bore a high price for the purposes of | 
the clothier ; but attention having been insensibly directed to 
other properties, the staple of the wool became longer, and 
the filaments less fine, and now, by changes in the demand, 
from causes before adverted to, the relative value of this 
kind of wool greatly declined ; and, in the cultivation of the 
breed, the production of fine and delicate wool is everywhere 
regarded as secondary to the properties of form, and the 
value of the animals for food. 

The South Down Breed has spread over a great tract of 
country, and either superseded the pre-existing varieties, or 
been so mingled with them in blood, as to have modified all 
their characters. But it is in an especial degree in the 
countries of the chalk-formation, that it has been generally 
established. It has superseded the ancient breeds of Berk- 
shire, Hampshire, and Wiltshire; and, extending into the 
counties to the westward, has greatly circumscribed the 
limits of the horned Dorsets. It has spread from the wastes of 
Surrey to the heaths of Norfolk, displacing the ancient breeds, 
or mixing with them, so as to obliterate their former distinc- 
tions. It has been carried beyond the countries of the chalk- 
formation, although in decreasing numbers. It has extended 
into Herefordshire, and partially into Devonshire and the 
lower parts of Wales, and northwards even to Westmoreland 


THE SOUTH DOWN BREED. 167 


and Cumberland. But, beyond the limits of the countries of 
the true chalk, or of the calcareous district in contact with 
the chalk, it is only found occupying tracts of narrow extent, 
or is employed as a means of improving the flocks of the 
heaths, commons, or other tracts which are still occupied by 
races of smaller Short-woolled Sheep. It has been introduced 
- into Scotland, and partially cultivated with some success ; 
but it has made no general progress in that country, and does 
not seem calculated to displace the hardier mountain breeds. 
already acclimated. 

The wide extension of a breed so greatly improved as the 
South Down, must be regarded as having been in a singular 
degree beneficial. Although itself the native of a dry coun- 
try, and therefore, it may be supposed, imperfectly suited to 
a humid soil and atmosphere, yet its range is not confined to 
very narrow limits. It is naturally of a healthy constitution, 
patient of scanty herbage, and, from the closeness of its 
fleece, fitted to resist changes of temperature. Further, like 
every other race of Sheep, it possesses the faculty of becom- 
ing inured to new conditions of soil and temperature; and 
experience, accordingly, has shewn, that it may be gradually 
naturalized in countries very different from that from which 
it has been derived. By crossing, it can be readily amalga- 
mated with all the varieties of Sheep which can be referred 
to the Black-faced Heath Breed as their type; and it can be 
made to improve the Black-faced Heath Breed itself, in situa- 
tions in which hardiness, and adaptation to a rude climate and 
country, are not more to be regarded than the improvement 
of the form and fleece. 

The wool of the South Down Sheep weighs, when washed, 
about 3b. the fleece; but, in some of the more highly-fed 
flocks of the lower countries, its weight is now 4 lb. or more. 
i staple, or length of the filaments, is from 2} to 4 inches, 
while that of the older breed rarely exceeded 2 inches, and 
re frequently fell short of that length. The wool, although 

ne and short, is somewhat harsh and brittle, and never was 


168 THE SHEEP. 


well fitted for the manufacture of the finer woollen cloths, 
requiring always a large admixture of the softer wools of 


home or foreign growth. But the war with France having 
at length excluded the manufacturers of England from most 
of the foreign markets which supplied the raw material, the 
woollen fabrics of the country were chiefly prepared from na- 
tive wool. This circumstance gave a high relative value, not . 
only to the South Down wool, but to all the finer and shorter 
kinds produced in the country, as that of the Norfolk, the 
Wiltshire, the Dorset, the Ryeland, the Cheviot, and the 
other varieties of Short-woolled Sheep which then abounded 
‘in the country. But, when the memorable events of 1814 
opened all the ancient marts of trade, wool of superior fine- 
ness was obtained, in the quantity required, from the coun- 
tries of Kurope in which the Merino race was cultivated, and, 
after a time, from the boundless wilds of the Australian colo- 
nies. This produced an immediate change in the market- 
price of all the finer wools formerly employed in the manu- 
facture of woollen cloth, and at length caused them to be 
applied to other purposes. In place of being used for the 
manufacture of woollen cloth, they were extensively employed 
for the lighter and looser fabrics classed under the name of 
Worsteds. This difference in the destination of the shorter 
wools, coupled with the diminution of the market-price, has 
produced an important change in the cultivation of Sheep in 
this country. It has led to an extension in the number of 
the Long-woolled Sheep, and a decrease in the number of 
those cultivated for the fineness of their wool; and, in the 
case of the latter, has caused attention to be directed rather 
to the weight of the fleece, than to those properties which fit 
it for the manufacture of cloth. All the lesser kinds of 
Sheep, as the Ryeland, Morfe Common, and Dean Forest 
breeds, producing a fine and delicate wool, are either extinct, 
or have lost their distinctive characters by intermixture with 
other races ; and, throughout entire tracts of country, which, 
not more than twenty-five years ago, were occupied by Short- 


THE OLD LINCOLN BREED. 169 


woolled Sheep, not a single flock of this kind is to be found. 
The South Down Breed, it has been seen, has been exten- 
sively substituted for many of the older breeds; but the 
Long-woolled Sheep of the lower country have likewise been 
progressively extending, and have either displaced the Short- 
woolled varieties altogether, or, by means of crossing, chan ged 
their character with respect to the production of wool. 


XVII.—THE OLD LINCOLN BREED. 


The breeds of Sheep hitherto described are proper to the 
mountains, moors, downs, and less cultivated districts, and 
most of them produce a short wool fitted for preparation by. 
the card. The breeds that remain to be described are of 
entirely different characters, with respect to form and the 
nature of the fleece. They are of large size, and, until im- 
proved by art, of coarse form; and the wool which they 
yield is long, thick, and tough in the filaments, of inferior 
felting properties, but tolerably soft to the touch, and rarely 
approaching to the harsh and wiry character of hair. This 
kind of wool, from the strength and toughness of its fibres, 
is unsuited for being broken into fragments by the action of 
the card, and is, accordingly, never prepared except for 
worsted yarn, and by the assorting of the comb. If the 
British Islands are inferior to other countries in the produc- 
tion of the finer felting wools, they are superior to any in 
the case of those adapted to the worsted manufacture. The 
long wools of the plains of England have in every known 
period been of the highest estimation. They were early 
carried to other countries, and now produce fabrics which — 
are diffused throughout the markets of the world. 

The Long-woolled Sheep of England are the natives of the 
richer plains, although they have long been carried to all 
parts of the country where agriculture has provided the 
means of Supplying artificial food. The first and most ex- 


170 THE SHEEP. 


tensive locality of this class of Sheep is the fine tract of new 


red sandstone which, extending southward from the lower 
valley of the Tees, forms the fertile valleys of York and 
Trent; and which, extending from the vale of Trent to the 
mouth of the Severn, and thence northwards, includes the 
greater part of the counties of Nottingham, Leicester, War- 
wick, Worcester, and a part of Stafford and Lancaster ; com- 
prehending a tract of the highest fertility with respect to the 
production of the grasses and other herbage plants. But 
connected with this tract, as a locality of the Long-woolled 
Sheep, are districts of the lias and oolite formations, com- 
prehending the counties of Rutland, Northampton, Glouces- 
ter, part of Oxford, and others, to which may be added the 
lower parts of Devonshire, and the valleys of the larger 
rivers in different parts of the country. The second locality 
of the Long-woolled Sheep comprehends the flat alluvial 
tracts of fens on the eastern coasts and the shores of Kent. 
Conformably to this division, the Long-woolled Sheep may 
be arranged in two general groups ; first, those of the inland 
plains, represented by the Teeswater, Leicester, and other 
varieties; and, secondly, those of the fens and alluvial coun- 
try, represented by the breeds of Lincolnshire and Romney 
Marsh. 

Of the breeds which have been mentioned, those of the 
marshes and fens are the most marked and peculiar in their 
characters. The rich and marshy tract of land, extending 
from the Humber southwards, through Lincolnshire into 
Norfolk, Cambridge, and the adjoining country, is a fitting 
habitation for the coarser and heavier kinds of Sheep. The 
lower part of Lincolnshire, accordingly, and the fertile tracts 
in connexion with it, are inhabited by a race remarkable, be- 
yond any other, for their size, their coarse and massy forms, 
and the length of their wool. The type of these breeds has 
been termed the Old Lincoln, which requires, however, to 
be distinguished from the race of mixed lineage which now 
inhabits the same country. ' 


THE OLD LINCOLN BREED. 171 


The Old Lincoln Sheep, of which the remnants now only 
exist, are destitute of horns, are of coarse form, have large 
limbs and hoofs, hollow flanks, and flat sides. Their long 
unctuous wool almost hangs to the ground, and they have a 
large tuft on the forehead. Their fleece weighs from 10 to 
12 Ib., and, in the rams and fattened wethers, often greatly 
exceeds this weight. They fatten slowly, and consume much 
food, but are valued by the butchers for their tendency to 
produce internal fat. About seventy years ago, when the 
New Leicester, or Dishley breed of Bakewell, became dis- 


tinguished, the Lincolnshire breeders resorted to this stock , 


as a means of communicating to their own the property of] 
early fattening, for which the new breed was eminent. This | - 
system of crossing was carried on until the close of the last | 


century, and has been continued up to the present time, so 
that the old breed is scarcely any where to be found of un- 
mixed blood. The figure given in my larger work is taken 
from a flock which has been maintained perfectly pure from 
a period previous to that in which the Dishley blood was in- 
troduced. The worthy owner, amidst all the changes of the 
times, has continued to maintain the stock which his fore- 
fathers had cultivated. By the continued breeding from the 
same blood, this particular flock has doubtless suffered de- 
terioration; but it retains all the essential characters of the 
ancient race, and presents, perhaps, the only living example 


of the most remarkable breed of Sheep which the British _ 


Islands have produced. 

The crossing of the Old Lincoln with the Dishley blood, was 
not at first effected without great opposition, and a contest 
arose between the supporters of the ancient breed and the 
new, which lasted for more than a quarter of a century. The 
advocates of the older breed contended for its greater hardi- 
ness, its better adaptation to the rich pastures of the country, 
the enormous weight to which individuals could be raised, 
and, above all, their unrivalled fleece. On the other hand, 
the earlier maturity, and the greater aptitude to fatten, of the 


/ 
: 


= . peat issrtnesesetneetin-ncomtvertenmegneeayetmns-sscciline-sasses 


i A a IUIBRIE OAR Bh EN eB ar . a 


rie THE SHEEP. 


new breed, were considerations urged by those who favoured 
the system of crossing which had been resorted to; and it 
was contended, that, although the weight of individual fleeces 
was diminished, the value of wool produced on the acre was 
increased, from the greater number of animals that could be 
maintained on the same space.* 


* A correspondence on this subject, in the year 1788, has been preserved, 
between Mr Chaplin, a distinguished breeder of the Old Lincolns, and Mr 
Bakewell of Dishley, which is curious, as shewing the angry feelings of the 
time, and bringing before us, and in his own words, one so distinguished for 
what he has done, and so little known by any thing he has written,—Mr Bake- 
well. It had been proposed, it seems, that a show of rams should take place at 
Partney, for the purpose of comparing together the old and new breeds. Mr 
Bakewell had declined allowing his rams to be seen until they were sorted, as 
it is termed, but appears to have thought that there would be no great harm 
in taking a peep at his rival’s, even in their state of disorder. Mr Chaplin re- 
senting the proceeding, thus addresses his wily opponent :—‘“ The extraordinary 
art made use of in the exhibition of your stock at Dishley, points out, in the 
strongest manner, the impropriety of shewing it in a disorderly state ; and after 
my refusal on the 21st instant to let you see my sheep before they were collected 
and sorted at home, I did not expect to hear of your meanly sneaking into my 
pastures at Wrangle, on the 24th, with two other people, driving my sheep 
into the fold, and examining them. Such unwarrantable conduct can only be 
accounted for by your great anxiety about the show of rams at Partney, near 
Spilsby, on the 18th of September, which was proposed for the purpose of mak- 
ing the comparison between those bred from your sheep and the original breed 
of the county. The small sheep that have no cross of the Durham kind, which 
you have had the address to impose upon the world, without size, without 
length, and without wool, I have always held to be unprofitable animals; but 
that I may not appear to be too tenacious of my own opinion, I hope you will 
produce them at Partney, on the 18th September next, to meet the Lincoln- 
shire sheep, where there will be many better judges than ourselves to decide on 
their merits.” 

The reply is characteristic. ‘ On my return home on Tuesday last, I saw 
your letter addressed to me of the 26th of August, in the Liecester paper of 
the 6th instant, in which you are pleased to notice the extraordinary art made 
use of in the exhibition of the stock at Dishley ; which you have seen at several 
different times. Surely you cannot say you have observed any unfair practices, 
or that you was ever denied seeing what was not engaged for the season, on 
account of their not being sorted, or being ina disorderly state. At Horncastle, 
on Thursday the 21st of August, I asked you if I might see your rams near 
Saltfleet. You did not say I should not, but that they were not sorted, and that 
when they were you would be glad to see me at Tathwell. I did not go to 
Saltfleet, but into the marshes, near Skegness; and from thence, on the Satur- 
day afternoon following, to Wrangle ; the next day, Sunday the 24th, to Free- 
ston, where I met with two graziers, with whom I had not any acquaintance 
till that day. They proposed on Monday to go to Skegness, and asked me if I 


. 


THE OLD LINCOLN BREED. 1738 


The claims of the modern breed in the end prevailed, and 
the remarkable old race of the fens was by degrees displaced, 
or mixed largely in blood with the new variety. The breeders 
of Lincolnshire doubtless consulted their immediate interests, 


in availing themselves of the improved stock of Bakewell, to 


give at once those qualities to their own in which it was defi- 
cient ; but at the same time, great regrét may now be enter- 
tained, that the native breed had not rather been improved 
by an application of the principle of selection, than destroyed 
in its distinctive characters by indiscriminate crossing. The 
wool of the true Old Lincoln breed was altogether peculiar, 


and such as no country in Europe produced. That of the 


thought they could see your rams. I told them I was informed on my way to 
and at Wrangle, that they might. We set forward together, and called at the 
inn at Wrangle, which T came from the day before, and there passed what you 


are pleased to term, my ‘meanly sneaking into your pastures on the 24th,’ 


We asked a young man if you had any rams there ; he informed us you had. 
‘Where are they ?’ ‘ In the close next the house.’ ‘May we see them?’ ‘Yes.’ 
‘ Who would shew them?’ ‘I will.’ From which we supposed he had fre- 
quently shewn them to others. We then alighted and went into the close; he 


opened the pen-gate, and we assisted him in driving them in, about fourteen 


in number. The age or breed of any of them I do not know. From thence 
we went to the person who has the care of your rams, about a mile and a-half 


nearer Skegness, and asked if we could see them ; he refused us, saying he had . 


received orders by aletter from you not to shew them toany one. He was then 
asked if they had not been shewn before. He answered they had. ‘When did 
he receive the order not to shew them?’ ‘Qn Saturday night last.’ Had we 
known this before, we should not have been guilty of what you term ‘ such un- 
warrantable conduct.’ I have long made it a rule not to find fault with another 
person’s stock. Why should you be so severe upon mine? And I now take 
the liberty of requesting you to explain what you mean ‘ by sheep without size, 
without length, and without wool,’ which you say [J have had the address to 
impose upon the world ; and of informing you that I am fully persuaded there 
are ten rams without a cross of the Durham, or any other kind, let for a thou- 
sean guineas more this season than the same number of the ‘true Old Lincoln- 
shire breed, of the long staple,’ some of these at the highest prices, into the 
Counties of Lincoln and Nottingham; and to breeders, many of whom have 
pie oe rocket porbot sheep for upwards of twenty years, and who have agreed 
$a ras oes higher prices for others, for future sce: than they have 
ere: us — os end be supposed capable of partes the value of what 
ingupest Gh = eld to be unprofitable animals.’ Did they not find their 

ng, would they persevere? The address must be extraordi- 


nary, indeed : ; : 
ction that could impose upon them against their interest and so long 


174 THE SHEEP, 


New Leicester breed is shorter and finer; but it wants the 
toughness, softness, and length of fibre which distinguish 
the other, and which, could it now be obtained, could be used 
with great advantage in various worsted manufactures. It 
cannot be doubted, that the same principles of breeding which 
enabled Mr Bakewell to form a new breed, could have been 
applied by the Lincolnshire breeders to remove the defects of 
| the native race, and call forth its useful properties. 

| But although the Old Lincoln breed is now almost extinet 
in the pure state, the breed of mixed lineage which has suc- 
ceeded to it in the countries of the fens often retams much 
of its peculiarities. In this rich district are yet to be found 
the largest sheep of the Island, and, it is believed, of Europe, 
with fleeces superior in weight and value to any other. They 
do not fatten so quickly as the New Leicesters, but they 
arrive at great weight, and pay the graziers well, on the fer- 
tile pastures which are proper to them. The wethers are fre- 
quently killed at the enormous weight of 50 or 60 Ib. the 
quarter. Great numbers of these large sheep may be seen 
pasturing on the rich flats on the Thames, for the supply of 
the London market. The mutton may not be sufficiently de- 
licate for the palates of the opulent, but for the supplies of 
the numerous population of labourers in our large cities, who 
are contented with wholesome, nourishing, and cheap food, the 
mutton of the countries of the fens is as much valued as any 
other in the kingdom. It is of national as well as of private 
concern, therefore, that the modern Lincoln breed should be 
preserved; and he would merit well of the country who should 
devote attention to its improvement. 


XVIIL—THE ROMNEY MARSH BREED. 


_ The Sheep of these Islands, it has been seen, may be di- 
vided into two general classes: 1. The smaller Sheep, inha-. 
biting the mountains, moors, downs, and less fertile tracts, 


THE ROMNEY MARSH BREED. 475 


and producing, for the most part, short wool, fitted for pre- 
paration by the card, and the manufacture of cloths; and, 
2. The larger Sheep, naturalized in the plains, marshes, and 
richer country, producing wool which is long in the filaments, 
and adapted to the manufacture of stuffs termed worsted. 
- With the progress of cultivation, and the increased means of 
supplying artificial food, the Long-woolled breeds have been 
continually gaining in numbers upon the Short-woolled. They 
may be divided into those which inhabit the fens and marshes, 
and those which are found in the inland and drier country. 
Of the former class, greatly the most numerous and remark- 
able was the Old Lincolnshire Breed already described, of 
which the remnants only now exist in the unmixed state. 
Another variety of the same class inhabited a limited tract _ 
of low ground termed Romney Marsh, situated on the south- 
ern coast of Kent,.at the western entrance to the Straits of 
Dover. : 
Romney Marsh is a plain of alluvial land nearly on the 
level of the sea, protected from the tides by dykes in the 
manner of the marshy flats of Holland. It extends from — 
Hythe to the river Rother, about fourteen miles ; and, at its 
broadest part, from Dengeness to Appledore, ten miles. It 
is divided into four districts—namely, Romney Marsh Pro- 
per, which is the largest and most westerly division ; Wal- 
land Marsh, the next adjoining to the westward; Denge 
Marsh, with South-Brooks on the south, and Guildford Marsh, 
the greater part of which is in the county of Sussex, on the 
west. This tract was known to the Anglo-Saxons by the 
Name of Merseware or Mersewarum, and the inhabitants 
were designated by a term signifying marsh-men or fen-men. 
It was early fenced from the overflowings of the sea, and the 
Conservation of the dykes and drainage was provided for by 
local laws and observances, which, so long ago as the reign 
. Henry TIL., were denominated ancient and approved cus- 
ms. The land consists in part of infertile sand, gravel, or 
Peat, but essentially of a deep rich alluvial clay, bearing the 


176 _ THE SHEEP. 


grasses and other herbage plants abundantly, and never 
having been subjected to the action of the plough. “It ys,” 

says Leland, “a marvelous rank ground for fedying catel, 
by the reason that the grasse groweth plentifully upon the 
wose, sum tyme cast up there by the se.” The land is sub- 
divided by rails, and deep ditches filled with stagnant water. 
There are scarcely any hedges or trees to afford shelter. 
The roads are broad miry paths, rudely fenced off from the 
marsh, and scarcely to be passed after heavy falls of rain. 
The inhabitants are few in number, scattered over the flat 


monotonous surface in mean hamlets or villages, and mostly 


employed in tending the numerous Sheep by which the ground 
is depastured. The air is humid from stagnant water, and 
the wealthier possessors of the farms reside, not in the 
marshes, but on the more elevated grounds surrounding 
them ; and the animals which are reared or fattened on the 
marsh, depend on the natural herbage which it produces. 
The principal produce is Sheep, which are reared in greater 
numbers than in any similar space in the kingdom. 

The ancient native Sheep of this district had coarse heads, 
furnished with a tuft of wool; thick necks, long stout limbs, 
broad feet, narrow chests, flat sides, and great bellies. They 
were of the larger class of Sheep, but yet fell short in weight 
of the heavy-woolled Sheep of the eastern counties. The 
wool weighed 7 lb. or 8 lb., had the usual qualities of long 
wool, was moderately soft, but unequal, and coarse on the 
- posterior parts. These Sheep were slow in fattening, the 
wethers being rarely fit for use until they had completed 
their third year; but yet they were favourites with the butch- 
ers, from their yielding a large proportion of internal fat and 
offal. They bore well the exposed maritime situation in © 
which they were placed, and acquired the habit of avoiding 
the dangerous ditches by which the country is intersected. 

The modern breed of Romney Marsh, which has extended 
into other parts of Kent, still exhibits much of the charac- 
ters of the ancient family, the individuals being, for the 


3 


- 


HE ROMNEY MARSH BREED. ld 


most part, long-legged, flat-sided, and coarse in the extre- 
mities. But a surprising change has taken place within 
the present century, and there now exist entire flocks, which 
cannot be recognised as the descendants of the older race. 
This change has arisen in part from intermixture of the New 
Leicester blood, and in part from the increased attention of 
breeders to the form and qualities of the animals. 

The Leicester Breed found its way into these marshes 
more slowly than into most other parts of the kingdom, and 
violent prejudices, not yet subdued, for a time resisted its 
reception. But about the beginning of the present century, 
a general desire began to manifest itself amongst the more 
enlightened breeders, to avail themselves of the means of 
improvement which a breed so highly cultivated as the New 
Leicester presented to them ; and great numbers of rams 
from the midland counties were accordingly introduced by 
individual breeders. The effects were soon apparent, even 
in the flocks of those who were the most opposed to the 
foreign breed ; and it may be doubted if there now exists & 
single long-woolled Sheep in the county of Kent, in which 
the influence of the New Leicester blood does not appear. 
The first effect of the crossing was to reduce the bulk of the 
native Sheep, but to give them a greater symmetry of parts 
and tendency to fatten; and, independently of the effects, 
direct and indirect, of the mixture, the placing of superior 
models before the eyes of breeders, produced a beneficial 
result throughout the whole district, so that more attention 
was from this period bestowed on improving the native stock 
by selection. After a time, indeed, the feeling in favour of 
the older race began to revive ; and, for a considerable period 
Past, the Romney Marsh breeders have,with few exceptions, 

Continued to breed from the indigenous stock. Nevertheless, 
_ the effects of the change produced by the former crossing 
| "emained, and the modern Sheep of the marsh, although 
Still retaining a greater degree of coarseness and lankness 
of body than can be approved of, form a very different race 


M 


178 THE SHEEP. 


of animals from the Kentish Sheep of the beginning of the 
present century. 

The arguments used against the introduction of the more 
cultivated breed were similar to those employed by the 
breeders of the eastern marshes. It was argued, that the 
decrease of size and deterioration of the fleece, were not 
compensated by the earlier maturity, and greater tendency 
to fatten, of the imported breed ; that the latter were less 
saleable to the butchers, and that the ewes were less pro- 
lific, and inferior as nurses. It was contended, besides, that 
the new breed and its descendants were less suited than the 
former to the open marshes on which they were to be reared 
without shelter or artificial food ; and that they were apt to 
be driven into the ditches by the strong gales which at cer- 
tain seasons swept over the marsh. A satisfactory answer 
can be given to the greater part of these objections. The 
decrease of weight was, to a certain extent, more apparent 
than real, arising from a diminution in the size of bone and 
the coarser parts; and there was always a more than cor- 
responding gain, by the breeders being enabled to bring 
their animals to market at an earlier period. The deprecia- 
tion in the weight and quality of the wool was little in the 
case of this breed; the wool of the Romney Marsh Sheep 
never having been in the first class, with respect either to 
quality or productiveness. That the new breed was less ac- 
ceptable to the butchers is true; but this was because the 
fat was more deposited on the external parts, and because 
the offal was less. The interest of the butcher, it is to be 
observed, corresponds only in certain points with that of the 
breeder. The butcher prefers the animals that yield him 
most profit from the parts sold in retail; but he has no con- 
cern with the quantity of food consumed by them, with the 
period required for bringing them to maturity, or with the 
details of management, which yield a profit to the owner. 
The butchers, as a class, have rarely been the advocates of 
those changes which have added so great a value to the live- 


THE ROMNEY MARSH BREED. - 5 


stock of the country ; and, in the preference which they long 
gave to the coarse sheep of Romney Marsh, their opinions 
exercised a peculiarly injurious influence on the breeding of 
Sheep in this part of England. The opinion frequently ex- 
pressed, that the new breed is less productive of lambs than 
the old, does not seem to be well founded. Generally, in- 
deed, all the coarser varieties of sheep are better nurses, and 
more prolific, than the more highly improved, under similar 
treatment. But it does not appear that the Romney Marsh 
Sheep were ever peculiarly noted for producing numerous: 
lambs, or for being good nurses. No sheep in this country 
had so much difficulty in parturition, or were so apt to desert | 
their offspring, as the Romney Marsh ewes. With respect 
to the averment, that the old breed was better suited than 
the new to withstand the stormy climate of the marsh, and 
preserve itself from the open ditches with which the country 
is intersected, it is to be observed, that some truth, mixed 
with more of error, exists in the statement. The New Lei- 
cester Breed is reared with facility in situations greatly more 
cold and exposed than the Romney Marsh, which possesses 
as good a climate, with respect to temperature, as exists in 
England. That the Romney Marsh Breed is better calcu- 
lated to preserve itself from the accidents resulting from the 
open ditches of the country than a breed naturalized in a dif- 
ferent situation, may be admitted; but the danger itself ought 
to be provided against by suitable enclosing, and not used as 
an argument against the cultivation of a superior breed. Fur- 
ther, the fact, if it shall be admitted, that the one breed is bet- 
ter fitted than the other to subsist without artificial food and 
Shelter, is no argument against the reception of the superior 
breed, but a strong one in favour of a better system of ma- 
nagement. There cannot be a doubt that the Sheep of the 
Romney Marsh have been signally benefited by the blood of 
the New Leicester race. The Romney Marsh breeders may 
now please themselves by believing that their own breed is 
superior to the imported one; and no harm will result from 


180 | THE SHEEP. 


the opinion, provided they discard their other prejudices, and 
breed from the best of their own stock, and upon a suitable 
model. The long and constant error of the Kentish breeders 
was their looking to size more than to the other qualities in- 
dicative of a good stock of Sheep. Size, indeed, is not to be 
disregarded in any breed reared in a country of rich pastures ; 
but that just conformation of parts, which indicates the dis- 
position to arrive at early maturity and fatten readily, is yet 
more to be regarded. 


XIX._THE OLDER LONG-WOOLLED BREEDS OF 
THE INLAND DISTRICTS. 


The Sheep of the marshes and fens are represented by the 
Lincolnshire and Romney Marsh Breeds already described. 
Minor varieties of the same breeds existed in detached allu- 
vial tracts along the coasts; but they were confined to nar- 
row localities, and have now all merged in the races of the 
adjoining districts. The other class of breeds consists of those 
which have been naturalized in the valleys, plains, and richer 

tracts of the inland parts. The great district of these breeds 
— is the rich tract of the new red Sandstone, which, commencing 
with the country of the Tees, extends southward by the Vales 
of York and Trent to the lower valley of the Severn, and 
thence again northward; although, it is to be observed, that 
it is chiefly in the eastern and midland counties that these 
breeds are found, and that, a8 we approach’ to the western 
limits of the new red sandstone in the north of Staffordshire, 
Cheshire, and Lancashire, the long-woolled breeds are in 
‘smaller numbers, and mixed with, or allied to, the ancient 
breeds of the forests, wastes, and chases. 

The most remarkable of the inland breeds was the Old 
Teeswater, so named from the valley of the beautiful river 
which separates the counties of York and Durham. This 
valley is exceedingly fertile, though of limited extent; but . 
the breed to which it gave a name extended, with some 


THE OLDER LONG-WOOLLED BREEDS. 181 


change of characters, northward into Durham, and south- 
ward through the greater part of Yorkshire, until it merged 
in the heavy-woolled Sheep of the marshes on the one hand, 
and those of Leicestershire and the other midland counties 
_ on the other. The true Teeswater Sheep, as reared in their 
native valley, were of the larger class, very tall, bearing a 
long but not a very thick fleece, inferior only in toughness 
and length of filaments to that of the ancient Lincolns. The 
wool was, however, more hard, less uniform in the staple, 
and very coarse towards the extremities. These Sheep were 
of an exceedingly uncouth form. They had coarse heads, large 
round haunches, and long stout limbs. They were slow in 
fattening, and required for their support good pastures, with . 
a supply of hay and corn. They were the most prolific of all _ 
our races of Sheep, bearing usually two, and not unfrequently | 
three, lambs at a birth; and they were surpassed by no other | 
Sheep in the faculty of yielding milk. This coarse and heavy 
breed has now entirely disappeared in its original form. The | 
New Leicester Breed progressively extended northward 
through the Vale of York, and at a still earlier period had 
been established in Northumberland, by breeders, the con- 
temporaries of Bakewell. Under these circumstances, the 
older breed of the Tees soon gave place to the new breed of 
the Midland Counties, either by substitution of the one for 
the other, or by the effects of crossing. At the commence- 
ment of the present century, a few individual Sheep only of 
the older breed were to be found in the hands of some old 
farmers, unwilling to relinquish preconceived opinions and 
habits. At the present time, not one living example, perhaps, [ 
remains of the true Old Teeswater Breed. The only traces ° 
of it that present themselves:are in the largeness of size of 
the sheep of particular breeders, who have continued to pre- 
fer a stock of larger sheep to the more modern variety of 
higher breeding. 
Proceeding southward, the Teeswater and its varieties 
gradually merged in the former breeds of Leicestershire and — 


18: THE SHEEP. 


the adjoining counties. These latter varieties were smaller 
than the true Teeswater, but of figures equally ungainly. 
They had coarse heads, thick hides, and long lank bodies ; 
and, corresponding with the defects of their external form, 
was their slowness in fattening and arriving at the required 
maturity. A Ram of the Warwickshire variety is described 
by Mr Marshall as having “ a frame large and remarkably 
loose, his bone heavy, his legs long and thick, terminating in 
great splaw feet, his chine, as well as his rump, sharp as a 
hatchet, his skin rattling on his ribs.” The wool of these 
Sheep varied with the locality, but generally it was inferior 
in weight, shorter in the staple, and more slender in the fila- 
ments, than that of the genuine Teeswater. All these varie- 
ties of sheep have disappeared, so that not a living example 
of them is to be found; and their place has been long taken 
by the beautiful breed, to which reference has been so fre- 
quently made, and of which more especial notice will be 
taken in the sequel. 

In the western counties, from the southern division of 
Staffordshire northward to the Solway Firth, the long-woolled 
varieties were rare, and found only in a few places. They 
were all of the coarsest kinds of sheep, and inferior in weight 
of body to those of the eastern and midland counties. Some 
of them lingered until a recent period in the lower parts of 
Westmoreland and Cumberland, and some of them extended 
across the Solway into the west of Scotland. They have 
now all disappeared, or left only indistinct traces of their for- 
mer existence in the flocks of a few careless Sheep-masters. 
It is not known whether Scotland originally possessed a na- 
tive race of Long-woolled Sheep ; but sheep of this kind were 
early in the last century introduced into the south-eastern 
border counties, and, about the time of the American war, 
were largely mixed in blood with the improved New Leicester. 

Another district of Long-woolled Sheep is found in England 
just beyond the tract of the lias and oolite limestone, in the 
counties of Devon and Somerset. One variety of them in-. 


THE OLDER LONG-WOOLLED BREEDS. 183. 


habited the southern part of Devonshire from the Vale of 
Honiton westward, and another was found more to the north 
stretching to the river Parret in Somersetshire. The first 
of these varieties, termed Southam Notts, had brown faces 
-and legs, crooked limbs, and flat sides. They carried a fleece 
of long wool, moderately soft, weighing from 9 lb. to 10 Ib., 
and at 30 months old the wethers weighed from 22 lb. to 
25 lb. the quarter. The other variety was termed Bampton 
Notts, from the village of that name on the confines of the — 
counties of Devon and Somerset. They had white faces, 
bore a very weighty fleece of long wool, and weighed at two 
years old from 30 lb. to 35 Ib. the quarter. ‘These breeds 
have been largely crossed with the New Leicester, and may 
be said to be now extinct in their pure state. The first mix- _ 
ture of blood produced at once animals greatly superior to 
the older race. The defect of these sheep was their clumsy 
forms and thick hides, and consequent indi sposition to fatten. 
These faults have been entirely corrected by the crossing 
that has taken place, although this was more tardily carried 
into effect in Devonshire than in any other part of England: 
and, on the basis of the older breeds, has been formed a very 
fine race of sheep, diminished in bulk of body from the ori- 
ginal Bamptons, but still amongst the largest sheep in the 
kingdom. Thus a wether of mixed blootl, killed in 1835, had 
arrived at the prodigious weight of 70 Ib. the quarter ; and one 
lately living in the neighbourhood of Exeter weighed 430 lb. 
live weight. The breeders of Devonshire take a just pride 
in their newly-formed breed, but do not seem disposed to 
reduce the size to the standard approved of by the Leicester 
breeders. 


XX.—THE LONG-WOOLLED BREEDS OF IRELAND. 


_ Ireland, from the fertility of the soil, the humidity of the cli- 
mate, and the mildness of the winters, is well suited for the 
rearing of Sheep of the larger kind; and Sheep appear, in every 


; 
' 
; 
. 
i 
i 
i 
: 
| 
; 
f 


184 THE SHEEP. 


known period, to have existed in numbers throughout the 
country. ‘They consisted partly of Short-woolled breeds, to 
which reference has been already made, and partly of a Long- 
woolled race, which extended with pretty uniform characters 
over the greater part of the level country. This latter race was 
of large size, and of a form peculiarly coarse and unthrifty. 
They are described by Mr Culley as they were seen by him at 
the fair of Ballinasloe, in the latter part of last century, 
thus :—“ I am sorry to say I never saw such ill-formed 
ugly sheep as these: the worst breeds we have in Great 
Britain are much superior. One would almost imagine 
that the sheep-breeders in Ireland have taken as much 
pains to breed plain awkward sheep, as many of the people 
in England have to breed handsome ones. I know nothing 
to recommend them except their size, which might please 
some old-fashioned breeders, who can get no kind of stock 
large enough. But I will endeavour to describe them, 
and leave my readers to judge for themselves. These 
sheep are supported by long, thick, crooked, and gray legs ; 
their heads long and ugly, with large flagging ears, gray faces, 
and eyes sunk, necks long, and set on below the shoulders ; 
breasts narrow and short, hollow before and behind the | 


_ shoulders; flat-sided, with high narrow herring backs ; hind 
| quarters drooping, and tail set low. In short, they are al- 
/ most in every respect contrary to what I apprehend a well- 
formed sheep should be.”’* Of the fidelity of this description 


no doubt can be entertained, although the change that has 
since taken place is so great as to leave little likeness of the 
former picture, There yet remain, indeed, some of the dis- 
tinctive characters of the older family,—the large heads, the 
flat sides, the narrow breasts ; but all that excessive ugliness 
of form which placed the Irish below the worst breeds of 
England, may be said to have disappeared. This has been 
the result of crossing with the New Leicester Breed, which 
began about the time Mr Culley wrote, and has been con- 


* Culley on Live Stock. 


THE LONG-WOOLLED BREEDS OF IRELAND. 185 


tinued since with such success that it is now difficult to find 


an individual of the unmixed race in the whole country. 
Many of the wealthier breeders acquired at once flocks of the 


pure New Leicester Breed ; but the main effect was produced | 


by crossing, which everywhere took place with a rapidity 


cere AOLS 


which may well be deemed remarkable in a country where | 


so defective a state of property exists, and where so many 
obstacles counteract the natural course of improvement. 

But the present Long-woolled Sheep of Ireland still want 
much of the perfection at which they are capable of arriving. 
They are yet, for the most part, too coarse in their general 
form, narrow in the chest, and flat-sided. The wool is only of 


medium quality and weight; and there is a sort of harshness — 


about it, which shews that the long wool of Ireland was never 
of good quality. The breed is more valued by the butcher 
in its present state than when more highly improved; but 
there is manifestly too great a proportion of waste for the 
profit of the breeder, and it does not appear that the mutton 
is superior to that of the New Leicesters. It is the fear of 
many breeders in Ireland, that the system of crossing has 


- been carried too far, and that the Sheep of the country are 


becoming too small. The same fear was entertained by the 


. owners of the Teeswater, the Romney Marsh, and other 


Long-woolled Sheep of England, when the Leicester blood 
was first introduced. But time allayed these misapprehen- 
Sions, at least to the extent to which they were at first ex- 
cited ; and although, in many districts of England, the breeders 
Seem now disposed to resist the further change of their stock 
by crossing, this was not until after a larger infusion of the 
blood of the new breed than has yet taken place in the great 
mass of the Long-woolled Sheep of Ireland, which certainly 
cannot be said to have arrived at a degree of refinement in- 
jurious to their useful qualities. They have still, for the most 
part, too great length of limbs with relation to the depth of 
careass; and their apparent bulk of body may yet be materially 
lessened without diminution of the weight. 


Tce. 


ANTI ET Pe 


THE SHEEP. 


XXI.—_THE COTSWOLD BREED. 


The Cotswold Breed of Sheep derives its name from a 
tract of low calcareous hills in the eastern division of the 
county of Gloucester, forming a part of the great Oolite for- 
mation of England, which, commencing with the moorlands. 
of Yorkshire, stretches diagonally across the island, and loses 
itself in the British Channel, near the Isle of Portland. The 
Gloucester portion of this tract is of moderate elevation, com- 
paratively infertile, yet capable of cultivation, and yielding 
in the natural state a short sweet herbage. It was formerly 
a range of bleak wastes, employed in the pasturage of Sheep, 
and much of it was in the state of common; but with the 
progress of the last century, the commons were appropriated, 


‘and cultivation was extended. It derives its name from Cote, 


a sheep-fold, and Would, a naked hill. It was early noted 
for the numbers of sheep which it maintained, and the fine- 
ness and abundance of their wool. “In these woulds,” says 
the translator of Camden, “ they feed in great numbers flockes 
of sheep, long-necked and square of bulk and bone, by reason 
(as is commonly thought) of the weally and hilly situation of 
their pasturage, whose wool, being most fine and soft, is held 
in passing great account amongst all nations.” Other writers 
refer to the excellence and abundance of the wool of the Cots- 
wold Wolds. Drayton contrasts the rich fleeces of Cotswold 
with those of the flocks of Sarum and Leominster, and gives the 
palm to Cotswold for its more abundant produce.* The faith- 
ful and laborious Stowe, in his Chronicles, states, that, in the 
year 1464, King Edward IV. “concluded an amnesty and 
league with King Henry of Castill, and John, King of Ara- 
gon, at the concluding whereof, hee granted licence for cer- 
* «1” whom Sarum’s plaine gives place, though famous for its flocks ; 
Yet hardly doth she tythe our Cotswolde’s wealthy locks : 
Though Lemster him exceed in finenesse of her ore, 


Yet quite he puts her downe for his abundant store.” 
PoLy-OLBION. 


THE COTSWOLD BREED. . ee 


tain Coteswold Sheepe to be transported into the country of 
Spaine, which have there since mightily increased and multi- 
plied to the Spanish profit, as it is said.” The worthy writer 
is not so well satisfied as some of his countrymen, that the 
Spaniards owed all their Sheep to England; for, adds he, “true . 
it is, that long ere thiswere Sheepe in Spaine, as may appear by 
a patent of King Henry the Second, granting to the weavers 
of London, that if any cloth were found to be made of Spanish 
wool, mixed with English wool, the maior of London should see 
it brent”’ Adam Speed, who wrote in 1629, describes the 
wool of the Cotswold Sheep as similar to that of the Ryeland. 
“In Herefordshire, especially about Lempster, and on those 
famous hills called Cotswold Hills, sheep are fed that pro- 
duce a singular good wool, which, for fineness, comes very 
near to that of Spain, for from it a thread may be drawn as 
fine as silk.” The precise character of the Sheep which pro- 
duced this wool is now unknown. They were probably simi- 
lar to the large fine-woolled breeds of the adjoining counties 
of Wilts and Berks, a supposition which agrees with the 
locality of the districts, and with “the long necks and square 
of bulk and bone” ascribed to the Cotswold Sheep by Camden, 
and explains the distinction of Drayton between the wealthy 
locks of Cotswold, and the? less abundant ore of Lemster. 
_ Markham, indeed, a writer of the time of Elizabeth, speaks of 
the Cotswold Sheep as having long wool, but this testimony 
cannot weigh against the direct authority of Speed in a later 
age ; and it may be believed, that the term long, as used by 
Markham, is merely relative, as applied to the two kinds of 
wool. 

The Sheep, however, which now possess the same country, 
and have inhabited it beyond the memory of the living gene- 
ration, are a Long-woolled race, and thus entirely distinct 
from the Sheep of the ancient forests, wolds, and downs, which 
produced the former fine wool of England. They are of the 
larger class of British Sheep, and all their characters denote 
them to be a breed of the plains and richer country. The 


188 THE SHEEP. 


period of their introduction is unknown ; but it probably took 
place pretty late in the last century, with the appropriation 
of the commons, and the extension of tillage in a degree suf- 
ficient to supply artificial food to a larger kind of animal. A 
traditionary belief has always existed in the country, that 
the modern race is not the original one of the Cotswold 
Wolds; but no intelligible account can be obtained from any 
one now living of the time or manner of its introduction. It 
was probably derived from the upper part of Oxfordshire, or - 
from Warwickshire, the ancient breed of which it seems in 


some respects to have resembled; and the change may have 


been chiefly produced by crossing. Mr Marshall and some 
intelligent writers, indeed, have believed that the Cotswold 
Sheep have always been a Long-woolled breed, and have 
cited, in support of this opinion, the absence of any information 
to be obtained in the district itself regarding the supposed 
change of breeds. But we know how quickly the mémory of 
such events is effaced, and that changes as great as that in 
the Cotswold Sheep have occurred in all parts of the king- 
dom, without our having the means of obtaining any account 
of them after the lapse of a short period. It would be op- 
posed to all that we know of the natural history of the Sheep, 
to suppose that a tract of country so recently cultivated and 
enclosed as the Cotswold Hills, could have maintained on its 
natural herbage one of the largest races of Sheep in En gland, 
and communicated to it the property of growing long wool. 
Such a race, we must suppose, was indigenous to the plains, 
and has merely taken the place of an older breed, in a man- 
ner similar to that which has been continually occurring 
during the last fifty years over a great part of the British 
Islands. 

But the Long-woolled Sheep of the Cotswold hills have 
themselves undergone an important change within a period 
comparatively recent. They were formerly of greater bulk 
of body and coarser forms, and are said to have borne a greater 
weight of wool than they now yield. But about sixty years 


ee ee ee 


THE COTSWOLD BREED. - 189 


ago, the New Leicester Breed, on its extension throughout 
the central counties, was made to cross the Cotswold as well 
as all the Long-woolled sheep of Gloucestershire. This sys- 
tem of crossing was pursued so extensively, that after a time 
there did not, perhaps, exist a single Cotswold flock which 
was not more or less mixed in blood with the New Leicester 
Breed. The effect was, as in other cases, to diminish the 
bulk of body of the existing breed, and lessen the produce of 
wool, but to communicate to the individuals a greater deli- 
eacy of form. Between twenty and thirty years ago, how- 
ever, the Cotswold breeders began to apprehend that their 
flocks were losing too much in carcass and fleece, and be- 
coming less fitted for the climate of their native hills. From ° 
this period, a preference began to be given to the native stock, 
and for many years past, crossing has been scarcely practised, 
and most of the breeders have been desirous to revert more 
to the former model of their breed. ‘ 

The modern Cotswold Sheep are of a size somewhat supe- 
rior to the highest bred New Leicesters, and their wool is 
more close upon the body. The staple measures from 6 to § 
inches, and the fleece weighs, upon a medium, from 7 to 8 lb., 
that of the inferior flocks not exceeding 5and6lb. It is 
Strong, of a good colour, rather coarse, but of a mellow 
quality. These sheep have not been brought to the same 
perfection of form as the New Leicester, and, like the sheep 
of Romney Marsh, they tend to accumulate fat on the rump 
almost to the degree of producing deformity ; but they are 
hardy, and usually of sound constitutions. The females are 
prolific, and good nurses, and the lambs are early covered with 
a close fleece. At a former period, when tillage was less 
extended than now, the Cotswold Sheep were frequently sent 
in winter to the valleys of the Thames and Severn, and gene- 
rally sold in the lean state at between two and three years 
old. But since the old sheep-walks have been broken up, and 
turnips and artificial grasses cultivated, the greater part of 
the sheep that are reared in the country are likewise fattened 


190 THE SHEEP. 


in it. They are kept on turnips, vetches, hay, and the grasses 
and clovers, and disposed of in the fat state at from a year 
and a-half to two years old; and within these last seven or 
‘eight years, the practice has been introduced of bringing them 
to market at twelve or fourteen months old. At the latter 
age they weigh from 15 to 24 Ib. the quarter ; and, when from 
a year and a-half to two years old, their medium weight is 
calculated to be from 20 to 30 lb. the quarter. 

The Cotswold Breed, after having long yielded to the pro- 
eress of the more highly cultivated New Leicester, has of 
recent years been attracting the attention of general breeders, 
and is now contesting the ground with the Leicester in various 
districts of England and Wales. The qualities that in an 
especial degree recommend it to notice are, its hardiness and 
property of thriving under common treatment, and the faculty 
of the females of yielding numerous lambs, and supporting 
them well. The breed is still far short of the New Leicester 
in form, but it has been making continued advances to a more 
perfect state, by the increased attention bestowed on selection 


and general treatment. The system of letting Rams for hire 
_ has been adopted on the large scale by some of the Cotswold 
breeders; and from the attention which this necessarily di- 
rects to the rearing of superior males, it cannot be doubted 
that the Cotswold Breed will be yet further extended and 


improved. 


XXIIL—THE NEW LEICESTER BREED. 


The Breed of Sheep termed the New Leicester, is so named 
from the county of Leicester, where it had its origin. It was 
formed by Robert Bakewell of Dishley, whence it is likewise 
termed the Dishley Breed. It was about the year 1755, that 
Mr Bakewell began those experiments on the breeding of 
animals, which led to such important results. His purpose 
was to produce sheep exempt from the defects of the races 


THE NEW LEICESTER BREED. Ft 


then cultivated, and possessed of a greater aptitude to fatten 
and arrive at early maturity; and the means which he em- 
ployed were, breeding from the individuals possessed of the 
properties sought for, and rendering. these properties perma- 
nent in the offspring. It is known that, by continued selec- 
tion of the male and female parents in a given number of 
animals, the characters deemed defects can, under certain 
limits, be removed, and the acquired properties rendered per- 
manent in the progeny by continued reproduction with one 
another. The principle that the virtues of parents are com- 
municated to their young, was not newly discovered ; but it 
was reserved for Bakewell to apply it in the case of the ani- 
mals used for human food in a new manner, and to produce 
more remarkable results than had before been arrived at. 
He perfectly understood the relation which exists between 
the external form of an animal and its aptitude to become fat 
ina short time. He saw that this relation did not depend 
upon size, nor, in the case of the Sheep, on the power of the 
— individual to yield a large quantity of wool. He therefore 
departed from the practice of all former breeders of the Long- 
woolled Sheep, who had regarded size and abundant growth 
of wool as primary properties in the parents. Holding bulk 
of body, and the produce of the fleece, to be secondary pro- 
Perties, Bakewell directed especial attention to the external 
form which indicates the property of yielding the largest 
(uantity of muscle and fat, with the least bone, and what is 
usually termed offal. He aimed, too, it is said, at producing 
the fat on the most valuable parts ; but this is merely a sub- 
Sidiary property, dependent upon general harmony of con- 
formation. Progressively perfecting his animals by skilful - 
Selection, he necessarily continued to breed from his own 
Stock, and did not scruple to connect together animals the 
Hearest allied in blood to one another. This system, con- 
tinually pursued, not only gave a permanency to the charac- 
ters imprinted on his Sheep, constituting a breed, in the pro- — 
Per sense of the term, but tended to produce that delicacy of 


f 


192 THE SHEEP. 


form, which experience shews to be connected with the power 


of secreting fat, and arriving at early maturity, or what may 
be termed premature age. The system, acted upon for suc- 
cessive generations, tended likewise to render the animals 
more the creatures of an artificial condition, more delicate in 
temperament as well as in form, less prolific of lambs, and. 
less capable of supplying milk to their offspring. It cannot 
be supposed that Bakewell was unobservant of these effects ; 
but he appears to have regarded them as being of a con- 
sideration secondary to the property of producing, in the 
shortest time, the largest quantity of fat, with the least con- 
sumption of herbage and other food. That this was the 
main result at which he aimed, all his practice shews ; and 
his success corresponded with the skill and perseverance 
with which he applied his principles to practice. His stock 
became gradually known and appreciated in the eountry 
around him ; but it was not until after the lapse of nearly a 
quarter of a century, that it arrived at that general estima- 
tion in which it was afterwards held. He early conceived the 
idea of letting his rams for the season, in place of selling 
them. The plan was ridiculed and opposed in every way, 
and it was not until after the labour of many years, that he 
succeeded in establishing it as a regular system. It is said 
that his rams were first let, in 1760, at 17s. 6d. each ; but this 
was certainly before his breed had arrived at its ultimate 
perfection. His usual price afterwards became a guinea, 
and, in rarer cases, two or three; but the price rapidly ad- 
vanced with the increasing reputation of his stock. In 
1784-5, the price had risen to about 100 guineas for his best 
rams. In 1786,.he made about 1000 guineas by the letting 
of his stock; and in 1789, he made 1200 guineas by three 
rams, and 2000 guineas by seven ; and in the same year, he made 
3000 guineas more by letting the remainder of his rams to the 
Dishley Society, then instituted. These facts deserve to be re- 
corded, as manifesting the high estimation in which the breed 


of Bakewell was held as soon as its properties became known. 
2 


THE NEW LEICESTER BREED. 193) | 


Controversies have arisen regarding the parent stock from / 
which Bakewell produced his breed. He himself chose to | 


adopt a studied mystery on the subject. Some have imagined 
that the basis of his breed was the Old Lincolnshire, some 
the Teeswater, some the Warwickshire, while others con- 
tend that he crossed with the Ryeland, the South Down, the 
Charnwood Forest, or some other of the Short-woolled breeds, 
in order to communicate that fineness of bone, and peculiar, 
character of wool, distinctive of his breed. But whatever 


were the first experiments of Bakewell, the knowledge of 
them perished with the individual; and there is nothing in | 
the breed, as it was at length perfected, which can enable us | 
to explain the progressive steps by which its characters were 


acquired. In one of his letters to Mr Chaplin, he admits that 
he had at one time made use of Old Lincoln rams; but he 
states, at the same time, that he had not done so for many 


years, and he ever afterwards expressed the utmost dislike — 


of this coarse and unthrifty breed, which was, indeed, the © 


most removed of any other from the model which his own 
principles of breeding led him to adopt. Neither was the 
Old Teeswater one which presented the characters required. 


~ This, it has been seen, was a very large and coarse breed, 


and not one, therefore, which Bakewell was likely to select 
as the basis of a stock, of which he sought rather to diminish 
than increase the size. Besides, the wool of the Old Tees- 
water Breed was extremely long in the filaments, and differed 
greatly in this respect from the shorter and finer fleece ac- 
quired by the New Leicesters. All the presumption is, that 


the basis of Bakewell’s breed was the Long-woolled Sheep 
of the midland counties, from which he may be supposed to / 
have made such selection as suited his purposes. On his _ 


obtaining his paternal farm, he would necessarily succeed to 
a stock of sheep similar to that which existed on the neigh- 
bouring farms, and it would only be in accordance with the 


_ practice of ordinary caution, that he should endeavour to im- 


prove this stock rather than at once adopt another of a dif- 
N 


i ne 
ST ee en ere 


194 : THE SHEEP. 


ferent race. It is commonly believed, that a little before 
the improvements of Bakewell, one breeder, at least, in the 
county of Leicester, had acquired the distinction of possessing 
superior sheep, and disposed of rams for the purpose of breed- 
ing. Whether Bakewell owed anything to the anterior 1m- 
provements of others, is unknown. From what we know of 
his character and habits, he himself would have been the last 
to acknowledge his obligations to another breeder; but he 
used such precautions for concealing the sources from which 
“he derived the means of improving his animals, as may well 
favour the suspicion that he was not wholly without obliga- 
tions to the labours of his cotemporaries or predecessors. 
With respect to the opinion that he crossed his stock with 
the Short-woolled Sheep, it rests upon no actual knowledge 
of the fact. It appears that he made numerous experiments 
in the early period of his breeding; and it is not impossible 
that he may have made a partial cross by such animals as 
seemed to suit his purposes, without reference to their origin. 
A certain darkness of colour in the skin of the face of his 
Sheep may seem to favour the ‘opinion that he had made a 
cross with some of the dark-faced Down or Forest breeds ; 


but we do not know whether the Old Leicesters did not, like 


the Southam Notts, and some others of the larger varieties, 
possess something of this peculiarity. With regard to the 
delicacy of form, and shortness of wool, of the New Leicester 
Breed, it is not necessary to account for their existence by 
resorting to the supposition of a mixture of blood with any of 
the short-woolled races. Both characters were necessarily 
communicated by the system of breeding which Bakewell 
pursued. Not only did he regard the growth of wool as 
a secondary effect, but he appears to have’ entertained the 
opinion, that the production of a large quantity of wool was 
inconsistent with the property of yielding much fat ; and this 
opinion would necessarily conduct him to the chgice of ani- 

mals for breeding which produced a lighter fleece. Besides, 
the Sheep of the midland counties did not always produce 


THE NEW LEICESTER BREED. 195 


wool which was long in the staple. A part of the counties of 
Leicester and Warwick lies in a calcareous country favour- 
able to the production of the shorter and finer kinds of wool ; 
and the wool of the Old-Warwickshire Sheep, in particular, 
appears to have closely approximated to that of the modern 
‘Leicesters. There is no reason, therefore, to assume, from 
any of the characters presented by the wool of the New Lei- 
cester Breed, that the parent stock was any other than the 
Long-woolled Sheep of the midland counties. 
The New Leicester Sheep, though smaller in bulk of body 
than the long-woolled races which they supplanted, are yet 
of the larger class of Sheep with respect to weight. Their 
limbs being shorter, and their bodies more round, compact, 
and deep, than in the former breeds, they are of greater 
Weight in proportion to their apparent bulk. Their actual 
Size is various, depending on the wishes of breeders to pos- 
Sess larger or smaller animals, and on the fertility, natural 
or acquired, of the districts in which they are reared. In 
Seneral, it may be said that the wethers weigh from 25 |b. 
to 351b. the quarter, when fattened in their second year. 
The wool is of medium length, having a staple of from six to 
eight inches, and weighing about 74 1b. the fleece in Sheep 
of fifteen or sixteen months old. It is too short and weak 
to be admitted into the first class of combing wools, and, in 
the properties which fit it for the manufacture of worsted, it 
falls short of the wool of the older breeds. Nevertheless it 
ig more evenly grown, is soft, and of good colour, and pos- 
Se8ses several properties of long wool in perfection. 

But it is neither in the size or weight of body, nor in the 
productivenegs or quality of the wool, that the real value of 
the New Leicester Breed consists. Its value and Superiority | 
are-to be found in its more perfect form, and aptitude to | 
fatten at an early age, in which respects it surpasses all the 
other varieties of Long-woolled Sheep which have been culti- / 
vated in this country, or naturalized in any part of Europe. | 
The New Leicester Sheep can, under the ordinary manage- 


196 THE SHEEP. 


ment of the farm, be readily fattened for human food at the 
age of fifteen months, that is, when, in the language of far- 
mers, they are shearlings; and in no case of practice do they 
need to exceed the age of two years and a few months, 
whereas the older breeds were not usually fattened for the 
market until late in their third, or until their fourth year. 
The females are not regarded as so prolific as those of the 
older breeds, nor are the lambs so hardy or quickly covered 
with a coat of wool, nor are the mothers such good nurses ; 
and yet the breed is not deficient in these properties, except 
where such refinement of breeding has been practised as to 
produce a too delicate temperament. In this breed the hind 
and fore quarters more nearly approximate in weight than 
in the less cultivated varieties. The fatty tissue, too, is 
more equally spread over the external muscles, and tends to 
accumulate less about the kidneys and internal parts, and 
hence the breed has never been so much a favourite with the 
butchers as the less improved races. The flesh, as of all the 
long-woolled breeds, is more lax in the fibre, and less deli- 
cate, than that of the smaller breeds of the mountains, 
forests, and downs; but the mutton does not seem in any 
respect to have been inferior to that of the older breeds of 
the same class. 

Mr Bakewell, it has been said, early conceived the idea of 
letting his rams on hire in place of selling them to the 
breeders. The animals were exhibited at Dishley at a stated 
time, in the latter end of July, or beginning of August; and 
the hirers put their own valuation on the rams they selected, 
and the offers were accepted or refused, without any auction. 
Certain conditions were understood or stipulated for, but no 
written legal agreement was made, every thing being trusted 
to the honour of the parties. About the middle of Septem- 


ber, the animals were sent to their destination in carriages 
hung on springs, and about the beginning of December, the 
hirer was expected to return them in safety; but if a ram 
died from any cause while in the hands of the hirer, the loss 


17 Rice Ne 


THE NEW LEICESTER BREED. 197 


fell upon the owner. The whole system manifested a won- 


derful degree of confidence and mutual good faith, and con- 


tributed, in an essential degree, to the diffusion of the new 
breed. Contemporaries and successors of Mr Bakewell 
adopted the same plan, and the sums expended by distant 
breeders in procuring, by this simple mean, the new breed of 
which Leicester was the centre, were surprisingly great. 
Up to the present time the practice has been carried on by 
breeders of the first distinction, some of whom acquired the 
unrivalled stock of Bakewell after his death, and are under- 
stood to have preserved it unmixed to the present hour. Nor 
was this system long confined to the county of Leicester, but 
it extended to other parts of the kingdom. Mr Culley, who 
had been a pupil of Bakewell’s, early established it on the 
large scale in the north of England, in the county of North- 
umberland, and various breeders, whose stock had acquired 


the necessary breeding and reputation, adopted it; so that 


there was scarcely a district of the Long-woolled Sheep in 
which one or more breeders did not pursue the practice of 
letting rams. ‘Not only did the system facilitate the diffu- 
sion of the new breed, but it contributed in an eminent de- 
gree to maintain its purity and goodness. It even enabled 
a certain class of breeders to direct attention to the rearing 
of rams as a distinct profession, and thus created a division 
of labour in the practice of breeding singularly conducive to 
its perfection. 4 

The formation of the New Leicester Breed of Sheep may | 
be said to form an era in the economical history of the do- | 
mestic animals, and may well confer distinction on the indi- | 
vidual who had talent to conceive, and fortitude to perfect, . 
the design. The result was not only the creation of a breed 
by art, but the establishment of principles which are of uni- 
versal application in the production of animals for human 
food. It has shewn that there are other properties than 
Size, and the kind and abundance of the wool, which render 
a race of Sheep profitable to the breeder; that a disposition 


198 THE SHEEP. 


to assimilate nourishment readily, and arrive at early ma- 
 turity, are properties to be essentially regarded ; and that 
these properties have a constant relation to a given form, 
which can be communicated from the parents to the young, 
and rendered permanent by a mixture of the blood of the 
animals to which this form has been transmitted, Bake- 
well, doubtless, carried his principles to the limits to which 
they could be carried with safety and profit to the owner of 
Sheep. Looking to symmetry and usefulness of form as the 
essential characters to be cultivated, he was too apt to re- 
gard the others, not merely as secondary, but as unimport- 
ant. He is reported to have said that he did not care whe- 
ther his Sheep produced wool at all; and he endeavoured, 
on all occasions, to shew the inutility of size as compared 
with the fattening property. But a close and abundant 
growth of wool, it is known, is connected with a healthy 
state of the system, and with the power of the animals to 
resist cold and atmospheric changes; and a certain size ig 
found, by the experience of all breeders of Sheep, to be an 
element in the profit to be derived from them. Every owner 
of Sheep is taught by the result, that an animal of a size to 
fatten to 40 lbs. the quarter, is more profitable than one that 
is capable of reaching only to 30 Ibs. in the same time. 
Weight of body, therefore, and the nature and productive- 
ness of the fleece, are not to be overlooked in the cultivation 
of Sheep; and although they may be regarded as Secondary 
properties, they cannot be held to be unimportant ones, But 
if Bakewell carried his principles of breeding to an extreme, 
there is no reason why his successors ghould not now profit 
by the knowledge acquired by observation and experience, 
and cultivate a profitable size, and suitable fleece, as far as 
‘these consist with the other properties sought for. Bake- 
well was compelled, in a sense, to confine himself to his own 
stock, and to the blood of one family, in order to preserve 
that standard of form which he had produced. From the 
Subsequent multiplication of the New Leicester Breed, 


THE NEW. LEICESTER BREED. Dy: 


modern breeders are relieved from all necessity of this kind. 
They can obtain individuals of the form required from dif- 
ferent flocks of the same breed, and need never, by a con- 
tinued adherence to the blood of one family, produce animals 
too delicate in form, deficient in weight of wool, and in that 
hardiness and soundness of constitution, which are even more 
necessary than the perfectness of individual form, for the 
safety and profit of the breeder.. The sacrifice of the second- 
ary properties which Bakewell did not hesitate to make, was | 
the result of circumstances which do not now exist; and the 
present feeling of breeders is to maintain a larger and more 
robust form of the animals,than seemed good to the earlier 
improvers. Thus, the Cotswold Breed of Sheep, though far 
inferior in form to the pure New Leicester, is maintaining a 
successful rivalship with it over a large extent of country : 
the lowland Gloucestershire, the Devonshire, and many of 
the Lincolnshire agriculturists, are propagating a larger race 
than is approved of by the Leicester breeders ; and even in 
the north of England, where the Leicester Breed was early 
established, a heavier race is preferred to the purest of the 
Dishley stock. | 

But whatever diversities of opinion may exist with respect 
to the degree of breeding, as it may be called, which it is ad- 
visable to communicate to the several varieties of Sheep now 
comprehended under the common denomination of Leicester, 
rio doubt can be entertained of the great benefits conferred on 
the breeders of the country by the formation and diffusion of 
the beautiful breed of Bakewell. Its superiority over all the 
older races of the long-woolled districts is attested by the 
degree in which it supplanted them, and the eagerness with 
which it was everywhere received. In less than fifty years \ 
from the first establishment of the shows of Dishley, it had | 
either superseded all the older Long-woolled Sheep of the 
country, or been so mingled with them in blood, as to have 
effaced their former distinctions. Not only did it supplant 
or become mixed with the older races of heavy Sheep, but, 


200 — THE SHEEP. F 


after a time, it effected an important change in a great part 
of the lighter Sheep of the country. In many cases it has 
become mixed in blood with them, and in many it has caused 
a Substitution of the heavy-woolled for the light, over large 
tracts of the country, so that entire districts, which, little 
more than twenty years ago, were stocked with the Short- 
woolled breeds, have not now one flock of them remaining. 
In every way, then, the diffusion of this breed has added to 
the value of the live-stock of the country. It has caused a 
superior race of animals to be reared in former districts of 
the Down and Forest Breeds, and extended over the richer 
country one more suited for general cultivation than the 
older and coarser races; and has been the means of commu- 
nicating to the former varieties of Long-woolled Sheep a uni- 
formity of character eminently favourable to further improve- 
ment, by multiplying the animals of a given breed which can 
be selected for breeding. It has even improved the agricul- 
ture of the country in an eminent degree, by calling forth a 
larger production of forage and herbage plants, for supplying 
food to a superior race of animals. 

Objections have been, from time to time, urged against the 
extension of this breed, founded on its supposed inferiority 
in size, in growth of wool, in hardiness, and fecundity of the 
females, to some of the breeds which it supplanted. The 
inferiority in size has been generally exaggerated with rela- 
tion to this breed, and in all cases it produces a greater 
weight with the same bulk of body; and even where it is 
deficient in weight, there has been a compensation in that 
tendency to arrive at an earlier maturity, in which it emi- 
nently excels all the races which have preceded it. If the 
wool shall be less in quantity, or inferior in certain proper- 
ties, to that of some of the older varieties, it must not be for- 
gotten, that the most esteemed of these varieties, as the Old 
Lincoln and Teeswater, were not suited for that extensive - 
diffusion, which has given so great a public importance to 
the breed of Bakewell, and that the extension of the new 


“(or earrarcetcapemt ee fecoNe a herte 


THE SHEEP. 201 


breed has added prodigiously to the total quantity and value 
of the long wool produced in the country. With respect to 
the supposed deficiency of this breed in hardiness, and fecun- — 
dity of the females, it is to be observed, that this, where it 
really exists, is the result of that refinement in breeding 


‘which would equally affect any race of Sheep subjected to 


the same treatment. The more we remove a race of animals 
from the natural state, by stimulating the system to an early 
maturity, the more we may expect them to lose that hardi- 
ness which is proper to them in a ruder condition. The New 
Leicester is a breed of artificial formation, and its establish- 
ment and maintenance infer a certain advancement in agri- 
culture, the due supply of cultivated food, and that care of 
the animals which their acquired habits and temperament. 
demand. It is not denied that the New Leicester breed is 
more delicate and less prolific than some of the coarser races 
whose places it has taken; but these defects exist only in 


a degree to be injurious, where refinement of breeding is 


carried to an excess which every breeder has now the power 
to avoid. : 


The BREEDS OF SHEEP of the British Islands which have © 
been generally referred to, or of which particular descrip- 
tions have been given, may be thus classified :— 

1. The Zetland and Orkney Breeds, of the variety brevi- 
cauda.—They inhabit the most northerly islands, and are dis- 


tinguished by their bearing a fleece of fine soft wool, largely 


intermixed with hairs. The purest of them are found on the 
remoter Islands of Zetland. They are hardy, wild, and of | 
small size; and do not merit extension beyond the countries 
which they now occupy. 

_ 2. The Older Soft-woolled Sheep of Scotland tua are 
of small weight, have long lank bodies, and bear a short soft 
wool, fitted for the manufacture of flannels, but deficient in 
the property of felting. These varieties are now nearly ex- 


202 THE SHEEP. 


tinct, or confined to the remoter islands and islets of the 
Hebrides. 

3. The Sheep of Wales, which may be divided into two 
classes; 1. The Sheep of the Higher Mountains, horned, of 
diminutive size, usually of a dark colour, and bearing soft 
wool, largely intermixed with hairs; 2. The Hornless Soft- 
-woolled Sheep, likewise of small size, bearing wool of a soft 
texture, fitted for the manufacture of hose and flannels, but 
deficient in the property of felting. To the typical forms of 
these races all the Mountain Sheep of Wales are more or 


less allied. They are valued for the delicacy of their mut- 


ton, and are carried in numbers to the lower country, fer the 
purpose of being fattened. They are hardy, but impatient of 
restraint, when removed from their native pastures. Allied 
in their characters to the Mountain Breeds of Wales are the 
Sheep of the Wicklow Mountains, now disappearing in the 
pure state, from the effects of crossing. 

4. The Kerry and other Sheep of the high lands of Ire- 
land, wild, slow in arriving at maturity, and producing a 
fleece of medium softness, but irregular, and mixed with 
hairs. ; 

5. The Black-faced Heath Breed, inhabiting the central 
chain of heathy mountains and moors which extend from 
Derbyshire northward. These sheep have long been carried 
to the mountains of Scotland, and now extend all northward 
through the northern Highlands to the Pentland Firth. They 
are armed with horns, and are the hardiest and boldest of 
all the races of British Sheep. They have dark-coloured 
faces and limbs, and bear shaggy fleeces of coarse wool. 
Their characters change when they are naturalized in the less 
rugged mountains and moors. In the lower heaths of York- 
shire, they approximate, through the coarse and unthrifty 
breed of Penistone, to the larger sheep of the plains: in other 
cases they pass into the finer-woolled sheep of the Commons, 
lower Heaths, and Forests. They produce a juicy and well- 


THE SHEEP, 203 


flavoured mutton, and are brought in great numbers from the 
mountains, to be fattened in the lower country. 

6. The Cheviot Breed, derived from a limited tract of 
green hills in the north of England, and thence widely spread 
over the mountainous districts of Scotland, and some parts 
of England and Ireland. These sheep somewhat exceed in 
weight the Black-faced Heath Breed: they are less robust, 
and less suited to a country of heaths, but yet they are 
amongst the hardiest of our Mountain Sheep. They are des- 
titute of horns in both sexes, and bear wool of medium fine- 
ness, fitted for preparation by the card, and employed in the 
manufacture of the coarser woollen cloths, _ 

ee The Old Norfolk Breed, reared in the heathy parts of 
the counties of Norfolk, Suffolk, and Cambridge.—They are 
a strong and agile race of Sheep, armed with horns in both 
Sexes, bear a clothing of wool of medium length, and are 
greatly valued for the excellence of their mutton. They pro- 
duce admirable crosses with the more highly cultivated 
breeds, and especially with the South Down, from which 
tause they are rapidly diminishing in numbers in the pure 
State. 

8. The Breeds of the Older Forests, Commons, and Chases. 
—These vary in their aspect, size, and properties, with the 
localities in which they have been naturalized. They have 
often dark or gray faces and limbs, have sometimes horns, 
and are sometimes destitute of horns, and bear, for the most 


part, a short felting wool. They have been continually 


diminishing in numbers with the appropriation of commons 
and the improvement of the country, so that few now remain 
without a mixture of the more cultivated breeds. In the 
West of England, however, are still to be found the Dart- 
moor and Exmoor breeds in considerable numbers, the for- 
mer occupying the high lands of Devonshire in the forest of 
Dartmoor ; the latter, a rugged district of limited extent at 
the sources of the river Exe in Somersetshire. They are 
both very wild and hardy races of. small Sheep, and differ 


10 


204 THE SHEEP. 


from the other Forest Breeds by producing wool of medium 
length, and more fitted for preparation by the comb than the 
card. 

9. The Ryeland Breed, the remains of some of the smaller 
fine-woolled varieties of the western counties.—These Sheep 
are hornless, of small size, and of good forms, patient of 


scanty food, and productive of a fine short felting wool, which 
was long the most esteemed for the making of cloth of any 
in England. This breed, from the substitution of the larger 
varieties, and the effects of crossing, has been long diminish- 


ing in numbers, and is now nearly extinct. 

10. The South Down Breed, derived from the chalky hills 
of Sussex on the British Channel.—It is to be classed 
amongst the Down and Forest Breeds, but it has been made 
to surpass them all by the effects of breeding and careful 
culture. It has been widely spread over all the south-east- 
ern counties of England, and has passed into districts be- 
yond the countries of the Chalk, taking the place of the pre- 
existing breeds of the downs and commons. The Sheep of 
this breed are destitute of horns, have dark-coloured faces 
and limbs, and produce a short felting wool fitted for pre- 
paration by the card. Their size varies with the locality, 
and the taste and opinions of the breeders ; but they are of 
greater weight, and bear heavier fleeces, than the older 
Sheep of the Sussex Downs. They are adapted to a lower 
range of pastures than the Black-faced Sheep and Cheviot 
Breeds, and are better fitted for.a dry and temperate climate 
than for a cold and moist one. 

11. The Old Wiltshire.—This and the other varieties of 
the larger fine-woolled Sheep of the central counties of Chalk, 
may be said to be now extinct beyond a few scattered rem- 
nants. They produced good felting wool, and fattened to a 
considerable weight; but they were of coarse forms, and 
have universally yielded to the progress of the more highly 
cultivated Southdowns. . . 
_ 12. The Dorset and Pink-nosed Somerset Breeds, natural- 


THE SHEEP? 205 


ized in the calcareous district of the south-western counties. 
They have horns in both sexes, bear a clothing wool of me- 
dium quality, and are noted, beyond any other breed, for the 
faculty of the females to receive the males at an early sea- 
son. This latter property has caused them to be extensively 
cultivated for the rearing of ‘house-lambs. They have now 
been much diminished in numbers by the effects of crossing, 
and the substitution of other breeds regarded as more pro- 
fitable. Allied to these varieties is the Isle of Portland 
Breed, of small size, and of little economical importance be- 
yond the narrow district which it inhabits. 

13. The Merino Breed, derived from the mountains of 
Spain, but partially naturalized in England.—It bears the 
finest wool of any known race of Sheep. On account of this 
property it has been extensively diffused over a great part of 
Europe, and carried to America, the Cape of Good Hope, 
and the Colonies of England in Australia. The individuals, 
however, are of defective forms, of tender constitutions, defi- 
cient in the power of yielding milk, and slow m arriving at 

maturity. For these reasons, the Merino Breed, notwith- 
Standing the abundance and excellence of its wool, has been 
received with little favour in England, and is deemed inferior 
in value to the more improved varieties of the country. 

14. The Long-woolled Sheep, comprehending, First, the 
pure New Leicester Breed; and, Secondly, the varieties more 
or less intermixed with it in blood, of which the principal are : 
1s¢, the larger class of Lincolnshire Sheep ; 2d, the Romney 
Marsh Breed ; 3d, the Cotswold Breed ; 4th, the Devonshire 
Notts ; 5h, the Long-woolled Irish varieties. All these Sheep 
are of large size, are destitute of horns in both sexes, and bear 

“long wool, unsuited for preparation by the card, but eminently 
fitted for preparation by the comb, and the manufacture of 
stuffs termed Worsted. They are the kinds of Sheep more 
especially adapted to the plains, and the districts where arti- 

| ficial food can be reared in the necessary quantity. They 


have been continually increasing in numbers with the exten- 
3 


206 . THE SHEEP. 


hed 


sion of tillage and the general improvement of agriculture. 
Of the several varieties, the New Leicester Breed occupies 
the first class with respect to form and the aptitude to fatten 
readily. The larger Lincolnshire, the Romney Marsh, the 
Cotswold, and the improved Devonshire Breeds, have each 
properties which render their cultivation profitable under 
particular circumstances. The Irish varieties have not yet 
generally attained to the perfection at which the others have 


arrived. 


ap CR RE Re 


SHORT-HORNED BULL. 


Til. THE OX. 


The important family of which the common Ox may be — 


regarded as typical, divides itself into three groups,—the 
Bisonv1ng, the BUBALINE, and the TAURINE. The Bisons 
Inhabit both the Old and New Continents, and are distin- 
Suished by round smooth horns, and a musky odour which 
exhales from the skin. The Buffaloes are characterized by 
angular horns, and a fainter odour of musk, and are natives 
of the warmer regions of Asia and Africa, The Taurine 
Sroup, comprehending the common Ox and its different races, 
forms the most important division of Bovide. 


| 


208 THE OX. 


The EUROPEAN Bison, Bison Huropeus, which once 
abounded in the great forests of Europe, is a fierce and 
powerful creature. He is the Grow of the Greeks, the Bison 
of the Latins, the Wisent of the Older Germans, the Zubr 
of the Poles, and the Zub of the Arabians. He for- 
merly abounded in the Hercynian and Sarmatian forests, 
and: was regarded as the largest of the quadrupeds indige- 
nous to Europe. But, like many animal species, the great 
Bison of Europe seems doomed to perish under a condition 
of countries that is no longer suited to him. He merely 
lingers in a portion of the vast regions of forest which he 
once inhabited. He is found in herds in the marshy forest 
of Bialowieza in Poland, where he is protected by the Go- 
vernment of Russia. He does not wander beyond the woods 
where he yet lingers, because it is probable the sustenance 
which suits him is not to be found in another habitat; and 
even in this retreat, he would probably cease to exist, were 
it not for the care used in supplying him with food during 
the snows of winter. 

Bisons are still found in considerable herds in the woods 
of the Caucasus. According to the recent travels of Nord- 
man, they exist in the greatest numbers from the Kuban to 
the Psib. In some places they inhabit the mountains in 
summer; in others, they are met with in swampy places all 
the year round. They are killed by the natives, and their 
horns, formed into drinking cups, are used by the wild chief- 
tains of the country. A large kind of Bison is likewise found 
in British India; but whether it is identical with the Bisons 
of Western Asia and Europe, or a distinct species, has not 
been determined. It is termed Gaur by the natives, and by 
some naturalists Bos gaurus. It has been hitherto found in 
the thick jungles in the western confines of the provinces of 
Bengal and Bahar. It is often killed by British sportsmen, 
‘but of the young none has yet been captured. The villagers 
have a superstitious terror of these creatures, and cannot be 
persuaded to go in search of the calves; believing that, if 


HISTORY. 209 


the Gaurs are in any way molested, they will attack the per- 
sons disturbing them, and never quit them till they have put 
them to death. | 

_ The European Bison is a large animal, equalling in stature 
the tallest of the domestic oxen of the countries he inhabits. 
His head is broad, and the forehead bulging; the horns are 
round, thick, black, and of a hard consistence, and larger in — 
the male than in the female: the eye is small, and its usual 
character is placid ; but when the animal is roused to anger, 
the pupil narrows to a slit, the coat becomes inflamed, and 
all the expression indicates blind fury and madness. The 
tongue is covered with tubercles, and, together with the lips, 
gums, and palate, is blue. The trunk and hinder parts of 
the body are relatively slender, the shoulders thick, and in 
the adult male the spines are so lengthened as to form withers. 
The skin is exceedingly thick, and emits the odour of musk. 
The trunk, down to the knees, is covered with woolly hair, 
the top of the head, neck, and shoulder, with long hair mixed 
with frizzled wool, forming a mane, and from the chine to the 
chest is a kind of beard. The tail comes below the hocks, and 
at its extremity is furnished with a brush of long bristly 


hairs. The female has smaller horns than the male, and > 


less elevated withers. Though a large animal, she has an 
udder smaller than that of the least of the domestic Cows. 
' These creatures are ferocious, strong, and fearless of ene- 
Mies. They hold their heads low, are swift of foot, but are 
Soon worn out, seldom running farther than one or two Eng- 
lish miles. They swim with facility, and delight to cool them- 
Selves in water. Their favourite places of resort are thickets © 
hear the. swampy banks of rivers. In the warmer season 
they frequent shadowy spots ; in winter they keep quiet during 
the day, in the thickets of firs and pines, browsing only at 
night, and finding sustenance on the bark of young trees. 
The thrusts of an old bull will overturn trees of five or six 
Inches diameter. An old bull, we are informed, is a match 


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210 THE OX. 


for four wolves, though packs of the latter animal will hunt 
down a full-grown bull when alone.* 

Like all the Bovine race in a state of nature, they avoid 
the dangerous approach of man. When suddenly come upon, 
they rush upon the intruder with fury. When taken young, 
they become used to their keepers, but resent the intrusion 
of strangers, and seem incapable of resigning their natural 
wildness, and submitting to domestication. They abhor the 
domestic races, shunning them, or goring them to death. 
Four young ones, captured in the forest of Bialowieza, at- 
forded to M. Gilbert, who had long resided in Poland, op- 
portunities of observing their habits. They refused to take 
the milk of the cow, but at length submitted to be suckled by 
a she-goat, raised on a table to the level of their muzzles. 
When satisfied, they sometimes tossed the nurse and the 
table to the distance of several feet. The two males died 
within a month. The females survived: they became docile 
and obedient to their keeper, licking his hands, rubbing his 
body gently with their heads and muzzles, and coming to 
him when they heard his voice. They hated the sight of 
scarlet, and drove all the common cows from their pastures. 
They came into season at the age of two years, and rejected 
the approaches of the domestic bull. 

The forest in which these creatures are preserved, con-— 
tains about 352 geographical square miles, of which about - 
one-sixth part consists of rushy swamps, and is intersected 
by numerous rivulets, and by one considerable river. The 
number of Bisons consists, at present, of about 700: they 
are protected by the Government, and are only suffered to be 
killed in small numbers, by especial permission. When the 
wolves are to be hunted, it is done with caution, and by a 
small number of dogs; and any noisy occupations which. 
might disturb the animals, are prohibited within the forest.t 


* Weissenborn, Magazine of Natural History. -+ Weissenborn. 


HISTORY. | $e 


From the habits of this creature, his indocility, and the in- 
stinctive aversion to the domestic races, it will appear that he 
is not one of those animals which Providence has ordained to 
yield up their services to man, and become an instrument of 
good to our race. He is rather to be numbered amongst 
those which are destined to disappear before the progress of 
civilization and the arts. By a rare chance, human interfer- 
ence has saved the wreck of the species in Europe from that 
destruction which awaited it; but this can only be for a 
- Season, and the time will doubtless come, when the great 

Bison of the European woods will be numbered with those 
extinct species, whose bones alone remain to testify their 
former existence. 

“The next to be mentioned of the Bisontine group is proper 
to another hemisphere, and was only made known to us when 
the rich savannahs and boundless forests of the Western Con- 

tinent revealed their living inhabitants to the wondering eyes 
of European travellers. The AMERICAN BISON, Bison Ame- 
ricanus, commonly, but erroneously, termed a Buffalo, re- 
Sembles the Bison of Europe in his general form, and in some 
of his habits. His head is large; his forehead is broad 
and convex; his horns are short, thick, and black; his 
eyes are small,-clear, and piercing, with a placid expres- 
Sion, except when he is irritated, and then the expression 
turns to that of ferocity and rage. He is very bulky in 
front, and has large withers, to which powerful muscles 
are attached to support his ponderous head. The back 
droops from the withers, and the posterior part of the body 
is meagre and thin. On the summit of his head there is 
an abundance of long woolly hair, which hangs over the 
face, the ears, and the horns. The throat, the neck, the 
Shoulders, and the breast, are covered with long hair; the 
back, and the rest of the trunk, are covered with short hairy 
wool. The colour of his fur is, in summer, a light brown, in 
winter a brownish-black. The tail is about eighteen inches 


212 THE OX. 


long, terminated by a tuft of hair. The female is smaller 


than the male, and has sherter horns, and less of hair on the 
anterior parts. The male, when fully grown, has been some- 
times found to weigh 2000 lb., though the average weight is 
said to be 12 or 14 ewt. 

This is a very strong and agile creature, making its way 
with great swiftness through tangled brushwood and heaps 
of snow. He is more irritable than dangerous, and flies from 
the sight of the hunter. When attacked by large dogs, he 
defends himself with courage. If his enemies catch him by 
his shaggy coat, he tosses them overhead: in an instant. 
Should they succeed in pinning him by the nose, after the 
manner of attack by the bull-dog, he spreads his fore-legs, 
and brings his hind-feet forward till he treads the dog be- 
neath him. He then tears his head loose, regardless of the 
" wound, and cryshes his enemy beneath his feet. These animals 
are eminently gregarious and migratory. They feed on the 
herbage of plains, and the sedgy plants of morasses and 
swamps. They are fond of salt, and travel great distances to 
the saline springs which yield this condiment: they swim 
with ease, crossing the most rapid rivers: they delight in 
coolness and moisture, bathing in pools and lakes during the 
heat of summer: in the winter season they dig the snow 
with their feet, that they may reach the plants beneath. They 
inhabit the temperate parts of North America, congregating 
in herds, in the woods and vast plains and savannahs where 
_ they feed. In summer they migrate northward, and then it 
is that they are seen in those prodigious herds that strike 
the traveller with wonder. The countless multitude seems 
to darken the plain, and stretch to the horizon. Captains 
Lewis and Clark, on one occasion, mention that the moving 
mass. which they beheld could not be less than 20,000 in 
number. At another time, they saw a herd crossing the 
Missouri, which, though the river was a mile in breadth, 
stretched across it from side to side as thick as the animals 
could swim. 


HISTORY. — 213 


The paths they make to the pools of fresh water or saline 
springs which they frequent, are often as numerous and trod- 
den as the highways of a peopled country ; and all travellers 
in the western countries Speak with amazement of the traces 
of their numbers. They retire to the boundless wilds of the 
interior before the progress of the settler, and from the per- 
secution of the chase. Formerly they were to be found to 
the eastward of the Apalachian Mountains ; but they are now 
driven to the remoter wilderness towards the Ohio, the Mis- 
souri, and west of the Mississippi on the south. They are the 
subjects of incessant attack and pursuit by the Indian tribes, 
who feed upon their flesh, and make cloaks, sandals, and other 
fabrics, of their hides. They are often slaughtered in vast 
numbers together. Sometimes they are driven in crowds into 
ravines, and to the edges of precipices, where they are killed 
by lances and other missiles. Sometimes, the grass being 
set fire to, the herd is encompassed and thrown into confu- 
sion, and all other means which their savage persecutors can 
devise are employed to entrap and destroy them. This fright- 
ful carnage cuts off by degrees the sources of the future sup- 
ply ; and the time may come when this marvel of the Ameri- 
can wilderness will be as rare to be seen as the Bison of the 
Lithuanian forests. 

Of the fitness of this creature for domestication no doubt 
ean exist. He is the native Ox of America: and had the 
country been inhabited by civilized communities, in place of 
tribes of savage hunters, a creature so formed by Nature 
for the service of man could not have remained unsubdued. 7 
He is far more docile than the Bison of Europe, and mani- 
fests no antipathy to the domestic race. He breeds with 
the latter; but how far the mixed progeny would be fruitful 
with one another, has not, it is believed, been determined. 
He is tamed with great facility, and manifests no ferocity. 
Numbers -are sometimes separated from the herd by the 
back-woodsmen of the United States, driven long journeys, 
and brought in, perfectly subdued, to the American towns, to 


214 THE OX. 


be disposed of to the inhabitants. It is said that they are 
sometimes kept on the farms of Kentucky, where the objec- 
_ tions to them are,—that the cow yields a small quantity of 
milk, and of a musky flavour ; and that she is restless, leap- 
ing the barriers intended to confine her, and enticing the 
other cattle to follow her to the woods. The flesh of the 
animal is reckoned good, and in an especial degree the tongue, 


and fleshy hump upon the shoulder. The hair has so much 
of the woolly character, that it may be woven into cloth, or 
formed into hats by the felting process: the skin is very 
thick, and when tanned, or else with the wool upon it, forms 
a warm covering, used by the Indians for cloaks and blankets. 
But the chief value of the domesticated Bison, it may be be- 
lieved, would be for the purposes of labour, for which -his 
agility and the great strength of his shoulders seem pecu- 
liarly to adapt him. A farmer on the great Kenhawa, we 
are informed by Mr Bingley, broke a young Bison to the 
yoke: the animal performed his work to admiration, and the 
only fault his master had to find with him was, that his pace 
was too quick for the steer with which he was yoked. 
Beyond the range of the American Bison, and stretching 
into regions of everlasting ice, is the habitat of another spe- 
cies of Bison, suited to other conditions of temperature and 
food. The Musk Ox, Ovibos moschatus, first appears about 
the 60th degree of northern latitude, and thence is found to 
the very extremity of the American continent, wandering in 
_ Search of food to the dreary islands beyond it during the brief 
space of the arctic vegetation. This creature is about the 
size of the little Ox of the most northerly Highlands of Scot- 
land.. He has no muzzle, or naked space around.the nose 
and lips, like the Common Ox and Bison, but, like the Sheep, 
he is covered to the lips with hair; and hence the genus has 
been termed Oviéos, as partaking of the character of the Ox 
and the Sheep. His horns, broad at the base, covering the 
upper part of the forehead, and bending downward, and then 
upward, enable him to defend himself against the Bear and 


HISTORY. ‘ 215 


the Wolf. To protect him from the cold, he is enveloped 
from head to foot in a dense fur, consisting partly of hair and 
partly of wool. The long hair almost trails to the ground, 
and underneath is a thick coat of delicate wool, of which fabrics 
like the finest silk may be formed. He has short muscular 
limbs and hoofs, like those of the Reindeer, and he is endowed 
with great activity, scaling the icy rocks of the country when 
pursued. He feeds partly on grasses and partly on lichens, 
and he is usually seen browsing in small herds or bands. 
His skin emits the strong odour of musk. Though suited, 
perhaps, to perform the same services as the Rein-deer, he 
has never been subjected to servitude. He is hunted by the 
rude Indians for his skin and flesh, which last is hard, lean, 
and tainted with the flavour of musk. The Esquimaux, whose 
country he inhabits along with the Rein-Deer, cover their 
heads and faces with his long hair, to defend them from the 
bites of musquitoes. They eat his flesh, and devour the con- 
tents of his paunch, which is filled with the lichens and other 
plants on which he feeds.* 

A like form of the Bison seems to have extended westward 
into Asia, by Behring’s Staits, along the shores of the Icy 
Ocean. But the osseous remains of this animal alone exist, 
and naturalists have not determined whether he was identi- 
cal with the species of America, or distinct from it. His 
. habitat shews that he was, like it, formed to brave the rigour’ 
of the coldest climates of the globe. © 
Proceeding southward into Central Asia, another species 

- of the Bisontine family appears, with habits which adapt him 
to the services of man. This creature is the Yak of the Tar- 
tar nations, the Bos gruniens of modern naturalists, 80 named. 
on account of the sound of his voice, which, like that of other 
Bisons, resembles the grunting of the Hog. This animal is 
found, both in the wild and the domesticated state, extending 
from the mountains of Thibet, through the vast countries of 


* Richardson, Faun. Bor. Amer. 


216 THE OX. 


the Kalmuk and Mongolian nations, to the Pacific Ocean. 
In the wild state his chief habitat is near the chain of snowy 
mountains separating India from Tartary. 

This species of Bison is about the size of the lesser breeds 
of Oxen in Britain ; but he is of a stout form, with short mus- 
cular limbs. He has fourteen pairs of ribs like the European 
Bison, and the anterior spines of his back are go lengthened 
as to form withers. He is armed with short and smooth 
horns, which frequently are wanting : they are black, or white, 
or white tipped with black, and bend upwards at the points. 
His muzzle is narrow, and covered with hairs, approaching 
in this respect to the character of the Ovibos. He is thickly 
clothed with hair and wool, to protect him from the cold of 
_ the elevated country which he inhabits. On the forehead, the 
hair is short and curling; on the back, long, pendent, and 
mixed with wool; and along the spine runs a kind of mane. 
The tail reaches to the heels, and is covered with long, fine 
hairs, giving to the animal the aspect of an ox with a horse’s 
tail: hence he has been sometimes termed the Horse-tailed 
Buffalo. The colour of the hair varies in the domesticated 
race ; it is usually black, or brownish-black, but other parts 
of the body are white, as the legs, the back, and the fine and 
graceful tail. The height of the animals at the withers is 
said to be about three feet ten inches, but there must be 
great variations in size ; for, in the British Museum, there is 
preserved the tail of a Yak, which measures six feet in 
length.* | 

The Yaks, in their state of nature, seem to prefer the woods 
of mountains to the valleys and open plains, and, like other 
Bisons, to seek the neighbourhood of rivers, lakes, and pools’; 
and this fondness for an aquatic situation they retain in the 
domestic state, wallowing in pools when occasion offers, and 
swimming when they come to rivers. They have a some- 
what gloomy aspect, and are said to be suspicious of strangers, 


* Griffith’s Animal Kingdom, 


(ALLER name 


od 


HISTORY. att 


and are even dangerous to be approached. Thus travellers 
on advancing to the Tartar camps, have seen the herd ap- 
proach as if to make an attack, whisking their long tails, and 


tossing their heads in a ménacing manner. 


This species is the only kind of cattle cultivated by many 


of the Kalmuk tribes, and even by some of the Western 


Tartars. It seems to be well adapted to the condition of 
those elevated plains, where continual changes of place are 
required to afford fresh pasturage for the flocks and herds 
of the communities. The Yaks are well suited for these fre- 
quent journeyings, being hardy, sure-footed, and capable of 
bearing burdens. The natives make tents and ropes of their 
hair, and coverings of their skins. The milk of the female 
is plentiful and good, yielding excellent butter. Thus the 
Yak is a valuable animal in those countries of migratory 
herdsmen, yielding at the same time food and the means of 
transport. A profitable trade, too, is pursued by the Tartars 
in the white tails which many of the oxen produce. ‘These 
tails are dyed of various beautiful colours, and are in request 
over all the East. They form the standards of the Persians 
and Turks: they are used in. India and Persia as chouries 
or fly-fans, for which purpose they are supplied with ivory 
handles finely carved: they are used as ornaments for the 
harnessing of elephants and horses: the Chinese dye the 
hair of a beautiful red, and form it into tufts for their bon- 
nets. 

_ The next in order of the Bovide is the BUBALINE group, 
distinguished hy a narrow convex forehead, higher than wide, 
and by angular, not rounded, horns. The general aspect of 


these animals is clumsy, their limbs are strong, their muzzle | 


is broad, their ears are large and pendent ; their hide is thick, 
usually coal-black, partially covered with hairs, and in the 
warmer countries nearly destitute of hairs. They are fond 


of water, and, like Hogs, wallow in moist and miry places. 


The female has four mamme, but two sometimes are not de- _— 


veloped. 


Sn 6 ee eee 2M te A AONE . 


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218 THE OX. 


Of Buffaloes in the state of nature, there seem to be more 
than one species which have not been sufficiently described. 
One of these, inhabiting the forests of India, is of great size 
and strength, with horns of enormous length. No live speci- 
men of this animal has yet been brought to Europe, but the 
head and horns have been obtained, and are to be found in 
various museums in England. The horns are of a crescent 
form, and have been obtained six feet in length, measuring a 
foot and a half in circumference at the base, and covering 
from point to point a space of ten feet. The skin of this ani- 
mal is covered with hair, in which respect it differs from 
others ofthe genus, and the tail extends no lower than the 
hock. It is surprising that various naturalists should main- 
tain that this species is identical with the Common Buffalo. 
The widest differences of external form must be disregarded 
in discriminating species, if such an opinion can be sustained. 
This gigantic creature has been seen and killed by British 
sportsmen, and is certainly distinct from the Common Buf- 
falo. He is the Bos Arni of Shaw; the Gigantic Arnee of 
travellers and writers. Another variety of Arnee is more 
abundant, and congregates in herds. His horns are very 
long, and have likewise a crescent form. Droves of them 
are to be seen floating in the Ganges, suffering themselves 
te be carried by the current to the creeks and islands where 
they feed. But whether this creature differs from the other 
in any other respect than age, has not been determined. 

The Common BuFFALO, Bos bubalus, Linn., inhabits the 
marshy forests of India. ‘These creatures are found, both in 
the wild and the tame state, throughout Hindostan and other 
countries of the East. They run with their heads held in 
a horizontal position, so that their horns rest upon their 
shoulders. Though more or less independent in their habits, 
they yet assemble in herds for mutual protection, or when in 
search of food. They avoid the short herbage of hills, pre- 
ferring the coarser plants of moist woods and marshy plains. 
They delight in water: they float upon the current, and cross 


HISTORY. - 219 


without hesitation arms of the sea and the broadest rivers. 
They are seen to dive as they swim, and drag up by their horns _ 
the aquatic plants on which they feed. In the domesticated 
state, they retain the love of moist situations ; they haunt the 
banks of rivers; they love to wallow in pools and swamps ; 
and will lie for hours in mud, or sunk, their heads alone 
visible, beneath the water of pools. Whole herds are to be 
seen crossing the Euphrates or the Nile, their keepers direct- 
ing them, and stepping from back to back as on a floating : 
raft. Their sense of smell is acute, and they are persever- 
ing in pursuit of assailants. They are fierce when irritated, 
and will not turn from their enemies. Even the Tiger dreads 
their formidable strength. When brought to fight with other 
animals in the arena, to afford a cruel pastime to Indian 
princes, the courage of the Tiger quails the instant the Buf- 
falo enters the arena: he would willingly shun the combat ; 
while the Buffalo, excited to fury at the sight of his natural 
enemy, bends his head level with the ground, that his horns 
may be in a position to strike, and rushes, notwithstanding 
the wounds he receives, on his terrible opponent. These 
powerful animals seem to be insensible of fear. When they 
fight, they strive to lift their enemy on their horns, and when 
he is thrown down, to crush him to death with their knees. 
Their fury then seems to be insatiable: they trample on the 
mangled body of their victim, and return again and again as © 
if to glut their vengeance. They have a memory tenacious 
of wrongs, and will resent them when occasion offers. In- 
stances are known, when, after having been brutally forced 
by their keeper to tasks beyond their strength, they have 
Seized the first opportunity to rush upon their tyrant and put 
him to death. Like all the Bovine family, they are roused 
to fury by the sight of scarlet and bright colours. 

The Buffalo is a creature of vast strength, which, in the 
state of servitude, he exercises in the pulling of loads and 
the bearing of burdens: In this respect he far surpasses any 
other of the Bovine family. When yoked in rude waggons 


220 THE OX. 


and cars, he drags them through miry tracks, swamps, and 
shallow rivers, with a force which no other animal but the 
Elephant could exert, and performs tasks of continued labour, 
under which the strongest horses and bullocks would sink 
down and die. His pace, however, is measured and slow, 
and unless he is cooled and largely supplied with water, he 
becomes feeble, and subject to mortal diseases. He may be 
termed the Camel of a country of marshes, but he would 
perish under the toils and thirst of an arid country. Though 
retaining, in the state of servitude, the sullen aspect and sus- 
picious character which are natural to him, he yet can be re- 
duced to complete subjection. He is managed by a ring, or 
simply by a rope, passed through the cartilage of his: nose. 
Much of his acquired docility depends upon education and 
treatment. In Eastern countries, where he is used with’ 
gentleness, and carefully instructed, he manifests an intelli- 
gence in which no other oxen surpass him, and becomes so 


gentle, that he may be guided by a child in all the labours of 
the field. 


The flesh of the Buffalo is hard and coarse, and could not 


be endured in countries where a value is set upon delicate 


animal food. His skin is esteemed for its thickness and dura- 
bility, surpassing greatly in this respect the hide of the Ox. 
It is so tough that it is used for defensive armour by the 
Javanese and other people of the Indian islands. The milk 
of the female is nutritive and well-tasted ; but she yields it in 
smaller quantity than the common cows of Europe, and be- 
comes sooncr dry when separated from her young, for whom 
she manifests the strongest affection. 

The Buffalo is extensively domesticated in India, Siam, 
China, and all the warmer countries of the East. He extends 
westward through Persia and Arabia to the shores of the 
Red Sea and the Hellespont. He spreads from Egypt along 
the southern coasts of the Mediterranean. He is found in 
Greece and the islands of the Archipelago, in Spain, Italy, - 
Hungary, and in part of the Russian dominions in Europe. 


Fe ee gee yee 


HISTORY. 221 


In the warmer regions of the East, the Buffalo has been 
domesticated beyond all memorial of tradition and history. 
But his introduction into Europe did not take place until 
an era comparatively recent. He was first known to the 
Greeks, and then only by description, on the conquest of 
Persia by Alexander the Great. Aristotle correctly describes 
him as being of a black colour, and as having a strong body, 
and thick horns lying backward: but the Bou8adrog of Aristotle, 
as well as the Bubalus of the early Roman writers, was of 
the Antelope family, and distinct from the modern Buffalo. 
From the period when the Buffalo of the Hast was first re- 
ferred to by the great naturalist of Greece, nearly a-thousand 
years elapsed before he was introduced as the beast of labour 
into Europe. It has been supposed that the Huns and other 
barbarians of the East brought him with them when they 
migrated for settlement and conquest towards the Roman 
States ; in which case he may be supposed to have been first 
introduced into Thrace and other countries of the Danube. 
Warncfried states that Buffaloes appeared in Italy in the 
year 596; and some of the earlier Monkish chroniclers refer 
to them with a sort of horror, as a strange kind of Oxen 
brought from Pagan lands. The Buffalo has been long in 
use in Egypt, though it does not appear that it was cultivated 
by the early Egyptians. Some suppose that he was not in- 
troduced into Egypt until after the conquests of the Saracens. 
The Arabian Mahommedans refuse to eat of the flesh of the 
Buffalo, on account, it may be believed,. of his resemblance 
tothe Hog. They have a strange tradition that the Hog 
and the Buffalo were the only animals which the Prophet 
was unable to convert to the true faith ! 

Of the European countries, Italy is that in which the Buf- 
falo is the mpst largely used as the beast of labour and the 
assistant of the husbandman. He there forms the riches of 
the poor inhabitants, who feed upon his milk and flesh, and 
use him in all the labours of carriage and the field. He finds 


eg eee ene a 


es 


Sapper 


eas 


222 ; THE OX. 


a fitting habitation in the pestilential swamps with which this 
beautiful country is defaced. Vast herds of them are seen 
grazing in the wild and swampy plains of Calabria, in the 
Pontine Marshes near Rome, and in other places along the 
shores which the deadly malaria renders nearly unfit for hu- 
man abode. In such cases the Buffaloes live almost in the 
state of nature, under the guidance of armed herdsmen, who 
acquire by habit a wonderful command over them. Often 
they are brought to Rome to be baited in the public shows 
by trained combatants, who exhibit surprising feats of courage 
and address. 

The Buffalo owes his general diffusion in the domesticated 
state to his hardiness, to his power of subsisting on coarse food, 
and to his great strength and fitness for labour. It becomes 
a question, whether it would be expedient to carry him be- 


yond the countries in which he is now naturalized, to others 


more distant, as France, Holland, and England. ‘The ques- 


tion, it is believed, must be answered in the negative. ‘The 


Buffalo is really the creature of the warmer countries, and 
his superiority over the Domestic Ox continually diminishes 
as we arrive at countries where the common grasses become 
abundant. He is in all cases, indeed, to be preferred for 
physical strength and endurance of labour to the Ox, but his 
pace is slow, and his action sluggish. In this country he 
cannot in any degree be compared to the Horse for the active 
labours of the road and farm, while the flesh would be in no 
demand, and the milk yielded by the cow would be too incon- 
siderable to be of value for the dairy. 

The Bubaline family likewise appears in Africa, and with 
such modifications of form as the peculiar physical condition 
of this vast continent produces in so many animal species. 
Although it may be the Asiatic Buffalo which has been do- 
mesticated in Kgypt, and perhaps along the southern shores 
of the Mediterranean, yet it follows in no.degree, that species 


‘or varieties proper to that continent have not been subdued. 


HISTORY. 223 


Bruce informs us that Buffaloes exist in great numbers in 
the woods of Abyssinia. Denham and Clapperton found them 
in the kingdom of Bornon, on the lake of Tchad, in the heart 
of Africa, and thence innumerable traces of them appear 
through all the intermediate countries to the Atlantic. Cap- 
tain Lyon mentions three kinds of Buffaloes which are found 
in great numbers in the kingdom of Fezzan; the first, an 
animal about the size of an Ass, with large head and horns, 
a reddish hide, and large bunches of hair hanging from each 
shoulder to the length of eighteen inches or two feet, and of 
a fierce disposition ; the second about the size of a Cow, red 
‘in colour, slow in its motions, and having large horns; and 
the third a white Buffalo, lighter in shape, and more active 
in its motions than the others, and so shy and swift that 
it can rarely be obtained. Unfortunately the gallant traveller 
gives us no details, and probably merely speaks from common 
reports. The information afforded by other travellers re- 
garding the Buffaloes of the interior is alike defective. We 
merely learn that these animals abound throughout the 
forests of Northern and Central Africa ; but of their distinc- 
tive characters, no information satisfactory to the naturalist 
has yet been afforded. 

There is one African species, however, of which we have 
authentic accounts, namely, the CAPE BuFFALO, the Bos 
Caffer of Sparrman, and admitted by that name into the cata- 
logues of naturalists. This formidable animal is found at the 
Cape, and extends to an unknown distance into the interior. 
He bears a distinct affinity in habits and character with the 
Buffalo of Asia, but is yet clearly marked by characters of 
his own. He is a large animal, being about five feet and a 
half in height at the shoulders, and nine feet long, having 
short muscular limbs, and a ponderous head. His horns are - 
long, thick, and black, spreading over the whole forehead 
until the bases nearly touch. The root of these rugged horns, 
overhanging the red and piercing eyes of the animal, gives 
him a sullen and malignant aspect. His ears are shaggy 


224 THE OX. 


and pendent, and about a foot in length, and are frequently 
found to be jagged and rent by the sharp spines of the dense 
and tangled brushwood through which he forces a passage. 
The Hottentots believe that the animals belong to demons, and 
that the rents in the ears are the marks by which these super- 
natural beings distinguish their own cattle. The hide is thick, 
black, tough, and covered with wiry hairs. On the throat, 
and along the dewlap, is a beard of stiff hairs, and on the 
neck and spine a scanty mane: the tail is bare, with a tuft 
at its extremity. 

These animals dwell in small herds in woods and thickets, 
though sometimes they unite in larger bodies, as of 150 or 
more together. They delight in moisture, passing hours in 
pools of water, and rolling themselves in mud. They are 
described by travellers as savage, treacherous, and vindic- 
tive. The bull, it is said, will lurk behind the covert of 
thickets, and rush on the unwary traveller, whose only hope 
of safety is to reach a tree, should.one happily be near. He 
cannot save himself by flight, for the furious brute quickly - 
overtakes him, throws him to the earth, tramples upon him 
with his feet, and crushes him to death with his knees. Nay, 
it is said that, after having mangled his victim, the creature 
retires to a distance, and then returns again and again with 
increased ferocity, as if to gratify, by repetition, his thirst of 
vengeance. The account of the animal’s lurking behind 
thickets is doubtless incorrect, for it is not the nature of her- 
bivorous animals to prey on other creatures from a desire of 
blood. And with respect to his treachery and cruelty, it is 
to be asked—which, in the eye of humanity and reason, is 
the most treacherous and cruel, the traveller and stranger 
who steals upon the lonely animal in his native haunt to shed 
his blood,.or the victim who uses the powers which Nature 
has given him to protect himself from slaughter ? 

Sparrman describes an encounter with several of these 
animals on the Great Fish River. The party advanced within 
twenty yards of one of them, when, actuated in some degree 


HISTORY. 225 


by their fears, they discharged their pieces nearly at the 
same time. The Buffalo, who had just turned his head round 
as if about to assault the intruders, fell on the discharge of 
the pieces, but, rising again, ran to the thickest part of the 
wood. Supposing that the shot was mortal, the travellers, 
in their hurry and ignorance of the danger, followed the ani- 
mal into the thicket ; but they found, in the sequel, that the 
balls had only struck him on the spine and stunned him, and 
been shivered to pieces on the bones. The travellers, now 


‘joined by their Hottentots, endeavoured to find out his re- 


treat in the vale below; but the animal, having recovered 
his surprise, came forth of his own accord to the skirts of the 
wood, and faced his assailants, who, happily fer them, had 
the advantage of the higher ground. Three shots were in- 
stantly fired, and one, entering the belly, proved mortal. 
The Buffalo again retreated to the shelter of the vale, dyeing 
the ground and bushes all the way as he went with his blood. 
The hunters followed with the utmost eaution through the 


thin and pervious part of the thicket. Again their victim — 


advanced to make an attack, but one of the party, from the 
place where he was posted, had the fortune to lodge a shot 


in the lungs; yet still the wounded animal had the strength 


to make a circuit of 150 paces before he fell. “ During his 
fall, and before he died,” continues the narration, “ he bel- 


lowed in a most stupendous manner, and this death-song of 


his inspired every one of us with joy, on account of the vic- 
tory we had gained: and so thoroughly steeled is frequently 
the human heart against the sufferings of the brute creation, 
that we hastened forward to enjoy the pleasure of seeing the 
Buffalo struggle with the pangs of death. I happened to be 
foremost among them, and I think it impossible for anguish, 
accompanied by a savage fierceness, to be painted in stronger 
colours than they were upon the face of this Buffalo. Iwas 
within ten steps of him when he perceived me, and, bellow- 
ing, raised himself suddenly again upon his legs.” |The tra- 
veller was so terrified, that, hastily firing his piece, his shot 
P 


| 
qi 
} 
) 


226 THE OX, 


missed the huge animal before him, and he precipitately fled. 
‘But it was all over with the poor Buffalo; he had made his 
last effort; he had left to his conquerors the happiness of 
having shed his blood, by means of deadly weapons, which 
all the vast strength and noble courage with which Nature 
had endowed him could not enable him to withstand ; he had 
left them the privilege of prating of their courage, philosophy, 
and love of nature, and of his malignity, cruelty, and vindic- 
tiveness. 

The same and other travellers give numerous accounts of 
their encounters with these strong and fearless creatures. 
M. Thunberg informs us, that, when travelling in Caffraria, 
he and his companions had just entered a wood, when they 
discovered a large old Buffalo, lying quite alone in a little 
space free from bushes. The animal no sooner observed the 
guide, who went first, than he rushed upon him with a dread- 
ful roar. The man was able to turn his horse quickly round 
a large tree, when the furious beast rushed upon the next of 
the party, and gored his horse so dreadfully in the belly, that 
it died soon after. Thetwo men fled to trees, and when the 
furious creature rushed on towards the next of the party, a 
horse without a rider chanced to be in front: the Buffalo at- 
tacked him with such fury, that he drove his horns through 
the horse’s breast, and out again through the very saddle. 
The horse was thrown to the ground with dreadful violence, 
and instantly died. Thunberg, coming up at the moment, 
found himself in the way of the enraged animal, but, from 
the narrowness of the path, he had no room to turn. He 
abandoned his horse, and took refuge in a tree. But the Buf- 
falo had now done: on killing the second horse, he turned 
suddenly about, and retreated to the covert. 

Some Europeans at the Cape, in chase of one of these 
animals, pursued him into a narrow path. He turned round, 
and rushed upon a man of the party, who plunged into the 
stream, and swam off. In an instant the Buffalo followed, 
and was close upon him, when the man, to save himself, 


si tiieetieeinenal 


HISTORY. 227 


dived. He dipped down overhead, and the Buffalo for the mo- 
ment lost sight of him, and swam toward the opposite shore, 
three miles distant, and would have reached it, but for a shot 
from the gun of a ship, which chanced to be lying at a little — 
distance. 

The following incident is recorded in a periodical work, on 
the authority of a Dutch-African farmer, who had been a 
witness of the scene fifteen years before. «© A party of boors 
had gone out to hunt a troop of Buffaloes, which were graz- 
ing in a piece of marshy ground, interspersed with groves of 
yellow wood and mimosa trees, on the very spot where the 
village of Somerset is now built. As they could not con- 
veniently get within shot of the game without crossing part 
of the valei or marsh, which did not afford a safe passage for 
horses, they agreed to leave their steeds in charge of their 
Hottentot servants, and to advance on foot, thinking that, if 
any of the Buffaloes should turn upon them, it would be easy 
to escape by retreating across the quagmire, which, though 
passable for man, would not support the weight of a heavy 
quadruped. They advanced accordingly, and, under cover of 
the bushes, approached the game with such advantage, that 
the first volley brought down three of the fattest of the herd, 
and so severely wounded the great bull leader, that he dropped 
on his knees, bellowing with pain. Thinking him mortally 
wounded, the foremost of the huntsmen issued from the covert, 
and began reloading his musket as he advanced, to give him 
a finishing shot. But no sooner did the infuriated animal 
see his foe in front of him, than he sprang up, and rushed 
headlong upon him. The man, throwing down his empty 
gun, fled towards the quagmire; but the savage beast was 
so close upon him that he despaired of escaping in that direc- 
tion, and turning suddenly round a clump of copsewood, be- 
gan to climb an. old mimosa tree which stood at one side 
of it. The raging beast, however, was too quick for him. 
Bounding forward with a roar, which my informant (who was 
one of the party) described as being one of the most frightful 


225 THE OX. 


sounds he ever heard, he caught the unfortunate man with 
his horns, just as he had nearly escaped his reach, and tossed 
‘ him in the air with such force, that the body fell, dreadfully 
mangled, into a lofty cleft of the tree. The Buffalo ran 
round the tree once or twice, apparently looking for the man, 
until, weakened with loss of blood, he again sunk on his knees. 
The rest of the party then, recovering from their confusion, 
came up and despatched him, though too late to save their 
comrade, whose body was hanging in the tree quite dead.” * 
These animals, fierce and cruel as they seem, do not cer- 
tainly seek occasions for attacking even their deadliest enemy, 
Man. Although in herds of great numbers together, and 
when they could beat their pursuers to the dust, like reeds, 
they invariably seek to save themselves by retreating to the 
nearest thickets. 'The females exhibit the warm attachment 
to their offspring which is characteristic of the whole Buba- 
line race, and which a beneficent Providence has imprinted 
in the bosoms of the rudest creatures. It is for the safety of 
the young and females, that the bulls seem to act as the 
guardians of the herd. At the season, too, of sexual desire, 
numbers of the bulls being expelled by their fellows from the 
community, wander about for a season with excited passions, 
and then manifest that ferocity which has been witnessed. 
The chase of these animals in the forests of tangled brush- 
wood which they frequent, is attended with much danger. 
Their strong hides resist the rifle ball like a target, and 
common balls of lead are flattened when they strike their 
bones. For this reason, the balls employed are of great 
weight, and alloyed with tin, and even then they are some- 
‘times shattered, as if they had struck a wall of steel. The 
Hottentots are extremely dexterous in this dangerous chase, 
erawling on their bellies until they reach their victims, 
and using, instead of their ancient weapons, the rifles and 
long muskets with which their rude masters have supplied 


* Penny Magazine, 1832, 


TORY: 229 


them. But the Caffres are in a peculiar degree attached to 
this dangerous exercise: they pursue the chase in companies ; 
and when an individual discovers the herd, he winds a small 
pipe made of the thigh-bone of a Sheep, and his companions 
hastening to his aid, they environ the game, and pierce them 
with spears. The Bushmen, for the same purpose, use jave- 
lins and arrows dipped in poison. . ; 

The flesh of these animals is said to be juicy and well- 
flavoured. But it is chiefly for their hides that they are : 
valued by the African hunters and the farmers of the Cape. 
These are so thick and tough, that they may be formed into 
targets, musket-proof; they are used, too, for whips, and 
for the straps of harness, and are said to form the only halters 
that can be depended upon for securing horses and oxen, 
when picketted in travelling, and alarmed by the stealthy 
approach of the Wolf, or the rustle of the Lion.* 

The use of fire-arms is rapidly thinning the number of these 
powerful creatures within the European territory of the Cape: 
they slowly retire to the woods of the interior, where they 
can be safe from the dangerous weapons of their destroyers. 
Nor is man their only enemy: the Wolf, the Hyena, and 
other fierce creatures, are the inhabitants of the same woods ; 
and the Lion, it is said, steals upon and attacks them. The 
natives speak of having been witnesses of these murderous 
conflicts; and say, that wounds inflicted by Lions are often: 
observed in the muzzles and bodies of such Buffaloes as are 
killed in the chase; and that the carcasses of Lions are some- 
times found gored by the terrible horns. of the Buffalo. A 
question that arises is, can these wild and dangerous animals 
be subjected to servitude and domestication? Sparrman in- 
forms us, that he saw a Buffalo calf, taken soon after birth, 
grazing amongst the other calves of the farm, and as docile 
as any of the herd. He accordingly expresses his belief, that 
the Buffalo calves, if taken young and properly trained, might 
be broken to the yoke. But the animals should not only be 


* Sparrman’s Voyage. 


230 2 THE OX. 


taken young, but should be born and made to breed in the 
state of servitude, in order that it might be fully known what 
ultimate changes domestication would produce in their habits, 
and to what degree they could be rendered the assistants of 
man, instead of being’, as now, the victims of his persecution. 

The next to be mentioned of the Bovine family is a native 
of India. The Gaya or JunGiB Ox, the Bos Srontalis of 
Lambert, inhabits the mountain forests east of the Brahma- 
pootra, but doubtless extends far into the dense regions of 
forest beyond that noble river. The precise place which 
this species occupies amongst the Bovide has not been sa- 
tisfactorily determined. He seems allied to the Bisontine 
and Taurine groups, and is probably to be regarded as the 
connecting link between them. 

The Jungle Ox has the head broad and flat above, and con- 
tracting suddenly to the muzzle. The horns are distant, 
thick at the base, and slightly compressed, the flat sides be- 
ing towards the front and rear; the ears are long, the eyes 
are like those of the Common Ox, the muzzle is destitute of 
hairs. A sharp ridge runs from the back part of the neck 
and top of the shoulder, along about a third part of the back, 
and then suddenly terminates. The sacrum has a consider- 
able declination to the tail, making the rump round like that 
of a hog. The tail descends to about the hock, is covered 
with short hairs, and terminates in a tuft. The prevailing 
colour is brown of various shades, and the legs, belly, and 
tip of the tail, are white. This animal has a somewhat clumsy 
aspect, but is yet possessed of great activity and strength. 
He is of the size of an ordinary Ox of this country. He does 
not grunt in the manner of the Yak of Tartary, but lows like 
the Ox of Europe, although with a shriller and softer tone. 

In their wild state, the Gayals seem to be entirely the 
inhabitants of a country of dense forest, never, of their own 
accord, approaching to the plains; and this habit they do not 
lose in the state of slavery. They delight to roam in the 
thickest woods; they neglect the grasses, and rather love to 


HISTORY. 254 


browse on shrubs and tender. shoots of trees: they repair to 
the jungle in search of their natural food, and ruminate under 
the shade of trees. They have not the habit of the Yak and 
the Buffalo of wallowing in water, but rather, in their habits, 
approach to the domestic race. The female goes with young 
eleven months: she yields very rich milk, but neither abun- 
dant nor lasting : she receives the male of the common race, 
and the progeny, it is said, is fruitful. 

The Gayals are hunted by certain tribes for their flesh, 
but they are also reclaimed to some extent in the Kast. 
They are perfectly docile in their domestic state, and are so 
fleet and active, that they may be used for the saddle. Cer- 
tain sects in India, it is said, sacrifice this animal to their 
gods; but the Hindoos will not shed the blood of the Gayal ; 
their sacred books informing them that the female of the 
Gayal is like the Cow, and to be held in the same veneration. 

The Taurine group of Bovide comprehends the DoMEsTIC 
Ox, Bos Taurus, under its several modifications of varieties 
or species. Whether the various members of this group are 
to be regarded as species, or merely as modifications of a 
common stock, that is, varieties or races, depends upon the 
meaning which is to be assigned to these terms. The 
Taurine group throughout the world possesses characters of 
resemblance, which may allow the naturalists to regard 
them as a single species, Just as we may so regard the 
various races of Dogs: but, at the same time, there are dif- 
ferences between the members quite aS great as in other 
cases are employed to discriminate species. The Zebu of the 


East differs as much, in external characters, from the Ox of f 


Europe, as the Ass from the Zebra; and there are subor- 
dinate races so divergent, that it 1s difficult to resist the 
- conclusion, that the Domesticated Oxen of different parts of 
the world have been derived from animals s0 distinct in the 
natural state, that they may either be regarded as species, 
or very permanent varieties. . 

Of the wild species of Ox, we have authentic records of 


CA er MD ANAC CO ce RT TE —- an 


SECO TOLEDO POON LN I 


232 THE OX. 


one, at least, which existed in the ancient forests of Europe, 
and which, we shall see, is not yet extinct. This animal was 
termed Urochs by the older Germans, a word which is de- 
rived from Ur, a root common to many languages, and signi- 


fying original or old, and ochs, an ox. The Greek and Ro- 
man writers employed the term Urus, either borrowed from 
the Teutonic, or derived from the same root, Ur, which 


anes 


entered into the composition of their own Taveos and Taurus. 
From the same source are derived the Shur and Tur of the 
Hebrew and other languages of the East; and hence, too, 
the Thur of the Poles, the Tyr, Tyer, Stier, Steer, in the 
dialects of northern Europe. We find, too, terms derived 
from the designation of the bull applied to the names of 
countries, mountains, and forests; as the Turan of Persia, 
the Turan of the Caucasus, the Turin of Italy, the Tours of 
France, the Thuringian forest, and many more. 

The Uri are described by Julius Oxsar as existing in the 


a a ee 


~~ 


aaa 


iidmiaieindiemmemme temeaadniaalll Setar g 
sn 


ms mem 


eae aoa aael 


Sed ee eee 


Hercynian forest, as being little short of elephants in size, 
and as being of the kind, colour, and figure of the bull.* 
Pliny refers to them as inhabitants of Scythia and Germany, 
along with the Bison, adverting, at the same time, to the 
vulgar error of confounding the Urus with the Bubalus, 
which, says he, was an animal like a Stag brought from 
Africa. Solinus repeats the: opinion of Pliny. “In the 
tract of the Hercynian forest, and in all the northern regions, 
are likewise Uri, which the ignorant vulgar term Bubali.” 
But the great confusion which subsequently took place, was 
in confounding the Urus with the Bison, although the dis- 
tinction had been drawn by Pliny, Seneca, Pomponius, and 
other writers. More modern authors still more distinetly 
point out the difference between those animals. Thus, Lau- 
rentius, in his commentaries on the affairs of his own time, 
writes: “ In Lithuania there are Bisons, Uri, and likewise 
Elks: those are in error who call the Bisons, Uri; for the 


* In Sylva Hercynie nascuntur qui appellantur Uri. Hi sunt magnitudine 
paulo infra Klephantos, specie et colore et figura Tauri.—De Bello Gallico, 


Oca ieee a 


HISTORY. 233 


Bisons differ from the Uri, which have the form of an Ox, 
in having manes, and long hairs about the neck, in having a 
beard hanging from the chin, and in smelling of musk.” In 
an ancient poem on a hunting match near Worms, we have 
a distinct account of the number of Bisons, Uri, and Elks, 
which were respectively slain ; and various chroniclers refer 
to the hunting of the ancient Uri in the forests of Europe. 
Heberstein, De Rebus Muscov., and Martin Cromer, De Situ - 
Poloniz, writers of the sixteenth century, describe the dis- 
tinction between the Bison or Zubr of the Poles, and the 
Thur of the same nation; and Anthony Schneibergen de- 
scribes the Thur as differing from the domestic race only in 
size and colour. Yet, in the middle ages, Albertus Magnus, 
and other writers, fell into the error of confounding those 
animals; and several German writers applied the term 
Urochs or Auerochs, the undoubted designation of their own 
Urus, to the Bison ; and modern naturalists, in opposition to 
the testimony of the older writers, are yet found to maintain 
the same error.* 


* Fossil skulls have been found in various parts of Europe resembling those 
of the domestic races, and differing from them only in size. But these bones 
indicate an animal greatly surpassing in magnitude any of the modern races 
of cattle. They are usually about one-third or more larger in linear size, 
indicating an animal nearly three times the bulk of the oxen of the present 
time. Their remains are found in the same alluvial deposites as those of 
the Elephant, and other large animals which formerly inhabited Eufope, prov- 
ing that they lived at the same era: they are found likewise in the same situa- 
tions as the great extinct Irish Elk, and thus seem to have survived various 
species with which they were associated, and even, perhaps, to have survived 
till within the historic era. A question, however, which has been agitated by 
naturalists is, Whether these huge animals are the origin of the domestic races, 
and may not even have been the Uri described by Caesar? The question is one 
which bears less than is assumed upon the origin of the existing races. We 


can, by all the evidence which the question admits of, trace existing races to i 
the ancient Uri which, long posterior to the historical era, inhabited the forests _ 


of Germany, Gaul, Britain, and other countries. It is a question involving an | 
entirely different series of considerations, whether these Uri were themselves 
descended from an anterior race, surpassing them in magnitude, and inhabit- 
ing the globe at the same time with other extinct species. While there is 
nothing that can directly support this hypothesis, there is nothing certainly 
founded on analogy that can enable us to invalidate it. There is nothing more 


vin hiinetneesrect eatin keeeattnaaae ee 


RRO REESE AE OGL POEL EL OS TP 


934. THE OX. 


The Uri of the forests of Europe seem to have rapidly 
decreased in numbers, with the progress of settlement and 
cultivation in different countries. Anthony Fitzstephen, who 
wrote in the latter part of the reign of Henry IL., describes 
them as then abounding in the great forests round London. 
John Leslie, Bishop of Ross, who wrote in 1598, states that 
the Wild Ox, which he terms Bos Sylvestris, was found in 
the woods of Scotland; that it was of a white colour, had a 
thick mane resembling a lion’s ; that it was wild and savage, 
and, when irritated, rushed upon the hunters, overthrew the 
horses, and despised the attacks of the fiercest dogs. He 
says that it had formerly abounded in the Sylva Caledonia, 
but was then only to be found at Stirling, Cumbernauld, and 
Kincardine. 

Hector Boece, in his History and Chronicles of Scotland, 
bears testimony to the like effect :—“ At this toun” (namely 
Stirling), “ began the grit wod of Calidon. This wod of 
Calidon ran fra Striveling throw Menteith and Stratherne, 
to Atholl and Lochquabir, as Ptolome writtis in his first 
table. In this wod wes sum time quhit bullis, with crisp and 
curland mane, like feirs lionis, and thoucht thay semit meek 
and tame in the remanent figure of thair bodyis, thay wer 
mair wild than ony uthir beistis, and had sic hatrent aganis 
the societe and cumpany of men, that thay come nevir in the 
wodis, nor lesuris quhair thay fand ony feit or haind thairof, 


incredible in the supposition, that animals should diminish in size, with changes 
in the condition of the earth, than that they should be extinguished altogether, 
and supplanted by new species. The fossil Urus inhabited Europe when a very 
different condition existed with regard to temperature, the supplies of vege- 
table food, and the consequent development of animal forms. Why should not 
the Urus, under these conditions, have been a far larger animal than he subse- 
quently became? We know by experience the effects of food in increasing or 
, diminishing the size of this very race of animals. The great Ox of the Lin- 
| colnshire fens exceeds in size the little Ox of Barbary or the Highland Hills, 
| as much as the fossil Urus exceeded the larger Oxen of Germany and England ; 
' and we cannot consider it as incredible, that an animal which inhabited Europe 
when Elephants found food and a climate suited to their natures, should have 
greatly surpassed in magnitude the same species under the present conditions 
of the same countries. 


HISTORY. 235 


any mony dayis eftir, thay eit nocht of the herbis that wer 
twichit or handillit be men. Thir bullis wer sa wild, that 
thay wer nevir tane but slight and crafty laubour, and sa 
impacient that, eftir thair.taking, they deit for importable 
doloure. Alse sone as ony man invadit thir bullis, they 
ruschit with so terrible preis on him, that they dang him to 
the eird, takand na feir of houndis, scharp lancis, nor uthir 
maist penitrive wapinnis.”’ “ And thoucht thir bullis wer 
bred in sindry boundis of the Calidon Wod, now, be conti- 
wal hunting and lust of insolent men, thay are distroyit in 
all partis of Scotland, and nane of thaim left bot allanerlie 
in Cumarnald.” * 

In this their last retreat, eee were subjected to persecu- 
tion :—In a remarkable document written in 1570-71, the 
writer, describing the aggressions of the King’s party, com- 
plains of the destruction of the Deer in the forest of Cum- 
bernauld, “and the quhit ky and bullis of the said forrest, to 
the gryt destructione of polecie, and hinder of the common- 
weill. For that kynd of ky and bullis he bein kepit thir 
money zeiris in the said forrest, and the like was not man- 
tenit in ony vther partis of the Ile of Albion.” + | 

Thus were the Uri of the Scottish forests driven from the 
woods which they inhabited, destroyed, or made captive. 
Part, indeed, had been preserved in some of the parks at- 
tached to the religious houses, their flesh being more esteemed 
than that of “their awin tame bestial.”? But, with the de- 
Struction of the Ancient Establishments, the oxen were 
dispersed, destroyed, or mingled with the common races. 
In a few places only they seem to have been preserved 
without intermixture,—chiefly in the Parks of the Dukes 
of Queensberry at Drumlanrig, and of the Dukes of Ha- 
milton, called the Chace of Cadzow. Those at Drumlanrig 
were, many years ago, destroyed by an order of the late 


atta 


* History and Chronicles of Scotland, by Hector Boece, translated by John 
Ballenden. 

t Tlustrations of Seottish History, preserved from Manuscripts, by Sir John 
Graham Dalyell, Bart. 


236 3 THE OX. 


Duke of Queensberry : those at the noble park of Hamilton 
are yet in existence, preserved with care. They have lost 
' the thick mane ascribed to them by the early writers, and 


the females have generally become destitute of horns; but 
all their other characters shew them indubitably to be the 
descendants of the ancient race. They are of the size of the 
cattle of the West Highlands: they are of a dun white 
colour ; and the muzzle, the inside of the ears, the tongue, and 
the hoofs, are black. They are very wild, and cautious of being 
approached ; and when suddenly come upon, they scamper 
off, turn round as if to examine the intruder, and generally 
gallop in circles, as if meditating an attack. They are not, 
however, vicious, though some of the bulls have manifested 
the savage and dogged temper of their race. Some persons 
have been pursued to trees. One poor bird-catcher, we are 
informed by Mr Patrick, when exercising his trade in the 
forest, was attacked by a savage bull: he had time to save 
himself by climbing up a tree; and he had there an opportu- 
nity of observing the habits of his assailant. The furious 
creature seemed to quiver with rage, and frequently attacked 
the tree with his head and hoofs. Finding his efforts vain, he 
left off the attempt, and began to browse at some distance. 
The prisoner then tried to descend, that he might make his 
escape ; but the watchful brute was at his post in an instant, 
and the poor man was not relieved until after many hours, 
on assistance arriving. Another individual was attacked on 
a summer evening: he was fortunate in reaching a tree, but 
was watched by the implacable brute throughout the whole 
night, and until late on the following day. These examples 
are remarkable, shewing, in the Wild Ox, that savage, per- 
tinacious, and implacable temper, which we know some others 
of the Bovine family display in their state of nature. The 
females conceal their calves amongst thickets or long grass, 
returning to them cautiously twice or thrice in the day, to 
suckle them. The little creatures exhibit the instincts of 
their race: when suddenly approached, they manifest extreme 
trepidation, throwing their ears close back upon their necks, 


HISTORY. 237 


and squatting upon the ground. The only method of killing 
the older animals is by shooting them. When the keepers ap- 
proach for that purpose, the poor creatures seem to be aware 
of their danger: they gallop away with speed ina dense mass, 
preserving, we are informed, a profound silence, and keeping 
close by the coverts and fences: the cows, in the mean time, 
that have calves forsake the herd, and repair to the places 
where their young are concealed, in order to defend them. 
The remains of the same remarkable race are to be found 
in several parks in England, differing only from éhose de- , 
scribed in so far as differences of situation may be supposed 
to have affected their characters. Of these, the most re- 
markable are those kept in the ancient park of Chillingham, 
the property of the Earl of Tankerville. These appear to — 
have remained the nearest in their characters to the original 
race. The herd at present amounts to about eighty in num- 
ber, consisting of about twenty-five bulls, forty cows, and 
fifteen steers. The eye-lashes and tips of the horns are 


a 


black, the muzzle is brown, the inside and a portion of the 
external part of the ears are reddish-brown, and all the rest 
of the animal is white. The bulls have merely the rudiments 


of manes, consisting of a ridge of coarse hairs upon the neck. 
The bulls fight for supremacy, and the vanquished submit to 
the law of superior strength. They are very shy and wild, 
and start off on the approach of danger; and, when they 
threaten an attack, they make circles around the object, ap- 
proaching nearer at each time. Lord Tankerville describes 
their method of retreat, which is eminently characteristic of 
| their wild habits. Like the Red Deer, they place the in- 
equalities of the ground between them and their pursuers : 
. they set off in a kind of walk, which increases to a trot, and 
then, having got the ground between them and the object, 
| they retreat at a gallop, availing themselves of the inequali- 
ties of the ground in such a manner, that they will traverse . 
| _ the whole park almost without being seen. The females : e 
conceal their young, returning to suckle them several times es i 


ae permet OE ct LOO LOL TCT ce eee 


anamenininanen aia 
: a 
aa 


genes 


A are PRS PIE 


238 THE OX. 


‘a-day. The calves have the instinctive wildness of the 
parents, couching on the ground like fawns, when surprised. 
It is said that, when one of the herd is wounded, or disabled 
from age, the rest will set upon and destroy it; a trait com- 


mon to other ruminants,—to the Deer,—and even to the 
Sheep, in its wildest and rudest state. These animals can 
be all readily domesticated. When taken young, and treated 
in the manner of the common oxen, they assume entirely the 


habits of the domestic race. 

One circumstance common to both the herds of Wild Oxen 
referred to, is the tendency of the young to deviate from the 
“ marking,” as it is termed, of the parents; that is, to be- 
come altogether black, or altogether white, or to have black 
ears in place of red ears, and so on: these animals are de- 
stroyed, and, therefore, the interesting part of the experi- 
ment is interrupted, of shewing what characters they would 
assume, were they to be left in the natural state. — Nothing 
is better known to breeders than that, by such means, all the 
characters of colour can be produced in any breed; thus the 
North Devon can be kept all red, the Pembroke all black, 
and so on; and this is done from generation to generation, 
by the course pursued in the case of these wild herds. 

The other parks of England in which the remains of this 
race have been, or are yet, preserved, are at Chartley, in 
Staffordshire, at Wollaton in Nottinghamshire, at Gisburne 
in Craven, at Limehall in Cheshire, at Ribbesdale in York- 
shire, and at Burton Constable in Yorkshire. | 

The wild cattle at Chartley Park, the property of Lord 
Ferrers, resemble those at Chillingham, but they are of larger 
size, and have the muzzles and ears black. \' They frequently 
tend to become entirely black ; and a singular superstition 
prevails in the vicinity, that, when a black calf is born, some 
calamity impends over the noble house of Ferrers. All the 
black calves are destroyed 2 and thus, as in other cases, we 
are unable to know what ultimate character of colour the race 
would assume. This park is a very ancient one: it belonged 


HISTORY. | 239 


to Devereux, Earl of Essex, and the cattle have ‘See in it 


from time ne immemorial. 
"Those which are kept at Ribbesdale are destitute of horns. 
The breed at Burton Constable, situated in the district of 


Holderness, perished all in the course of the last century, of 


an epidemic disorder. They were of large size,—a conse- 


quence of the richness of the pasture in which they fed. 
They had the ears, muzzle, and tip of the tail, black. 

Other herds of this race appear to have existed in different 
parts of England, but they have merged in the common 
breeds of the country, and the records of them have been 


lost. Fortunately, however, for the inquiries of the natu- , 
ralist, the same animals are yet to be found in that part of | 
the kingdom where we naturally should look for the exist- | 
ence of an indigenous race of cattle, namely, Wales, under 
such circumstances as to set at rest the questions that have j 
been agitated regarding the relation which exists between / 


them and the domestic race. 

The ancient Britons, it is known, when their country was 
overwhelmed by the Roman power, made a brave defence in 
the mountains beyond the Severn, *preserving their flocks 
and herds, in all times the cherished possession of the Celtic 
nations. Although overrun for a season by the Roman 
legions, they defended themselves against the Saxon nations 
with determined courage, and only yielded at length, at a 
long posterior period, to the English power, when it became 
too strong to be resisted ; and even then they retained their 
customs, their language, and their national feelings. It is 
here, as in the countries beyond the Grampians, that we must 
look for the older races of the domestic oxen of the country. 

It appears from various notices, that a race of cattle, 
similar to that which we now find at Chillingham Park and 
elsewhere, existed in Wales in the 10th century. Howell 
Dha, surnamed the Good, describes certain cattle of Wales 
as being white, and having red ears. Ata subseqent period, 
we are informed that, as a compensation for offences com- 


ee ee 


240 THE OX. 


mitted against certain Princes of Wales, there were de- 
manded 100 white cows with red ears; but that, if the cattle 
were of a black colour, 150 were to be given. When the 
Princes of Wales were compelled to render homage to the 
Kings of England, the same kinds of cattle, we are in- 
formed, were sometimes rendered in acknowledgment of the 
sovereignty. In an old history of Flanders, quoted by Holin- 
shed, it is stated that the lady of the Lord de Breuse, in 
order to appease King John, whom she and her husband had 
mortally offended, sent to the Queen a present of 400 kine and 
one bull, all of white colour except the ears, which were red. 

The individuals of this race yet existing in Wales are 
found chiefly in the county of Pembroke, where they have 
been kept by some individuals perfectly pure, as a part of 
their regular farm-stock. Until a period comparatively 
recent, they were very numerous ; and persons are yet living 


in the county of Pembroke, who remember when they were 


driven in droves to the pastures of the Severn, and the neigh- 
bouring markets. Their whole essential characters are the 
same as those at Chillingham and Chartley Park, and elge- 
where. Their horns are white, tipped with black, and ex- 
tended and turned upwards in the manner distinctive of the 
wild breed. The inside of the ears and the muzzle are black, 
and their feet are black to the fetlock joint. Their skin is 
unctuous, and of a deep-toned yellow colour. Individuals of 
this race are sometimes born entirely black, and then they are 
not to be distinguished from the common cattle of the moun- 
tains. 

The same race has been found in several parts of the 
Continent of Europe. In Italy a few herds have been pre- 
served. In the North of Sweden, the race can yet be dis- 
tinguished amongst the reclaimed cattle of the country. In 
the defiles of the Pyrenees, they have been observed by 
English sportsmen, altogether wild, and marked in the same 
manner as the cattle of the parks, and in no respect to be 
distinguished from them. : 


HISTORY. | 241 


The peculiar colour and marking which this race assumes 
and retains in the English parks, has been supposed by some 


to indicate a distinction of species. But colour, as is well 


known to naturalists, is one.of the external characters of ani- 
mals the least to be regarded as indicative of specific dis- 
tinctions ; and, in the case of these oxen, it has been seen that 
the character itself is not constant. It may seem remark- 
able that these animals, in their wild state, should» be all 
white, with coloured muzzles and éars ; but this is not 
more remarkable than that Boars, in the wild state, should 
be brown, or Turkeys in the wild state black, with white 
tips to their wings. The colour, we may suppose, is that 
which the animals tended to assume in a wooded country in 
the climate of Albion. Under other conditions of tempera- 
ture and food, the colour of the same variety might become 
black, with a peculiar marking equally constant. An ancient 
writer, speaking of Uri in the woods of Poland, describes 
them as black, with a white streak along the chine. In the 


North Highlands of Scotland, the prevailing colour of the | per 
cattle is black: but sometimes individuals are born white, ‘2 
with coloured ears and muzzle, so nearly resembling the Wild _ 


Cattle of the parks, that they would be mistaken for them. 


The habits of the wild race have been supposed to present . 
an impassable distinction between it and the tame ; but this 
difference assuredly does not constitute a distinction of species. \ 
It is known that the instincts and habits of animals are suited — 


to the condition in which they are placed, and change with 
that condition. The Wild Hog, a bold and powerful creature 
in his state of liberty, is no sooner submitted to domestica- 
tion, than his habits adapt themselves to his new condition, 
and he communicates to his offspring all the habits which 
ft them for a state of slavery; and so it is with other 
animals subjected to domestication. The Wild Oxen of 
the parks, breeding solely with one another, and living, in 


so far as their confined condition will allow, in the natural | 


Q 


pI Be 8 EAT OMEY TOME T IIE LL RN IE OP) RORY I TITAN 


242 3 THE OX. 


state, retain the habits and instincts proper to them in that 
condition, and communicate these to their young. Hence 
| the young calves couch themselves on the ground, and 
| tremble when approached; but these characters disappear 
in the next generation, when the animals are domesticated : 


hence the mothers conceal their calves, and return to suckle 
' them at stated times ; but the same thing has been observed in 
the case of cows of the Scotch mountains, when left in a state 
of liberty. All the habits of these animals, in short, includ- 
ing that of goring to death their wounded companions, are 
those of the wild'state, and disappear when they are reclaimed. 

Thus we have all the evidence which the question admits 
of, that no real distinction exists between the Wild Oxen of 
the parks, and those which have for ages been subjected to 
domestication in the same country; and that these Wild 
Oxen are no other than the Uri of the ancient forests of Eu- 
rope.—That the wild of the Bos Taurus inhabited, in like 
manner, the woods of Western Asia, may, from analogy, be 
inferred. The Scriptures speak of Wild Oxen, as distin- 
guished from those that are tame; and the Arabian poets 
abound with allusions to the hunting of the Wild Bull, but 
do not afford data for determining whether this was the 
Urus, the Bison, or any other species. 

The Ox has been domesticated from the earliest records 
of human society, and may be deemed to have been an in- 
strument, under Providence, for leading men from the savage 
state. Although endowed with vast physical powers, his 
instinct leads him to yield up his faculties to the service of 
man, by assisting him in bearing burdens, and tilling the 
earth ; and in every age his patient docility has been applied 
to these ends. The wealth of the first people was their 
flocks and herds: “ And Abram was very rich in cattle, in 
silver, and in gold; and he went on his journeys from the 
‘south even to Bethel, unto the place where his tent had been at 
the beginning, between Bethel and Hai, unto the place of the 


HISTORY. OS 


altar which he had made there at the first; and there Abram 
called on the name of the Lord; and Lot also, which went 


with Abram, had flocks, and herds, and tents.” And in the | 


ease of all the early nations of which we read, the Ox was 
amongst the valued possessions of the people. He was a me- 
dium of traffic, and his image came at length to be stamped 
upon the metals used as money. His flesh was usually per- 
mitted to be eaten, though, in certain cases, the use of it 
was limited, or altogether forbidden, as when he was em- 
ployed in labour, or when his numbers were few, as in the 
earlier stages of societies. The Hindoos were forbidden to 
shed his blood at all; the Egyptians were only permitted to 
do so at sacrifices; and other nations were compelled to 
equal abstinence. The Jews were suffered to partake of his 
flesh freely, on the condition, simply, that the firstling of the 
herd should be dedicated to the Lord, and that no part of the 
blood should be tasted; but the Jews were naturally abste- 
mious in the use of animal food, and such of the calves as 
were not killed, were mostly brought up for the purposes of 
labour, or the yielding of milk. 3 
History, sacred and profane, evinces to us in what estima- 
tion this gift of Providence has been held in every age. The 
Bull became one of the signs of the Zodiac in the earliest 
period of nations. He formed an object of adoration to 
people of the East, as he yet does to their descendants, after 
the lapse of an unknown period. The Egyptians made him 
the subject. of a preposterous worship, as did the Lybians and 
other ancient nations; and he entered largely into the my- 
thological systems of Greece and Rome. Independently, 


. too, of religious feeling, a certain respect was manifested 


towards the’Ox, on account of the services he rendered. The 
precept of the Jewish law, “Thou shalt not muzzle the 
ox when he treadeth out the corn,” which likewise is a 
precept of the Hindoo law, was an observance founded on 
tenderness towards the animal, as well as an expression 
of thankfulness at this. the crowning labour of the har- 


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244 THE OX. 


vest. The rustic writers of the Romans, in their lessons 
on the treatment of the labouring Ox, shew how much of 
real humanity entered into their feelings regarding this 
ancient and docile assistant of the husbandman. They 
direct that the length of the furrow shall not exceed 120 
paces, or else that the oxen shall have a time for breath- 
ing allowed them before they are urged to renewed efforts. 
The ploughman is required to shift the yoke, that their backs 
may not be galled,—to moisten their mouths with water, 
and to strengthen them with wine when they are suffering 
from fatigue. Even the safeguard of the laws was thrown 
around these humble servants of the farm. To destroy them 
wantonly was a public crime. A Roman citizen, we are 
informed by Pliny, was condemned to exile, because he had 
killed his labouring ox, to gratify the appetite of a capricious 
boy ; and other examples are on record, to testify how greatly 
the useful services of the Ox were valued. The Celtic na- 
tions of Europe seem to have possessed somewhat of the 
same sentiments, mixed with religious feelings. Even to 
our own day, certain superstitious remembrances are attached 
to the Red Cow, whose milk is believed to be a charm for 
certain ailments. ; 

The Ox contributes to human support, by other means than 
his strength employed in labour, or his bedy rendered to us 
when dead. ‘The female yields her milk in quantity not only 
sufficient to rear her own offspring, but to afford a salutary 
food to her protectors. She gives it with a facility and in 
an abundance unknown in the case of any other animal. 
While most of the mammalia will refuse to yield their milk 
unless their young be suffered to partake of it, the Cow gives 
it beyond the period of maternal solicitude as freely as when 
her young is before her eyes. She is every where docile, 
patient, and gentle. She remains quiescent with the herd, 
or shares with humbleness her portion of the shed which is — 
their common shelter. She obeys the commands of her keeper, 
and recognises the milkmaid’s voice, 


HISTORY. <a 245 


While the female is thus gentle and humble, the bull re- 
tains much of the natural fierceness of his race. He scarcely 
fears an enemy, and is easily excited to rage. He can be 


reduced to subjection by the effects of discipline, and made 


to assist in all the labours of the field; but yet his passions 
are often suddenly excited, and his great strength may be 
dangerously exerted. But, by depriving him of his virile 
powers, all the native ferocity of his race disappears, and he 
becomes as submissive as the heifer. Itis then that he gives 
us the benefit of his vast strength, exempt from the danger of 
his natural temperament, bending his neck to patient toil, 
and grazing with content in his allotted pastures. 

We are apt to associate with the character of this useful 
creature, ideas of apathy, and want of intelligence. But the 
brain of the Ox is larger than that of the Horse ; and, though 
he is far inferior to that noble creature in spirit and grace, 
it is questionable if he falls short of him in sagacity. The 
bull has been known to charge himself with the guardianship 
of the herd, to keep them from wandering into forbidden 
pastures, and to protect from intruders their allotted bound- 
aries. When beasts of prey approach, he is at the post of 
danger, marshalling the herd into a phalanx, and placing the 
young in the centre and rear. 

When the season of sexual desire arrives, fierce combats 
ensue between the rival bulls. Their eyes sparkle with rage, 
and they rush upon one another with desperate force. But 
their fury is given, not for the purpose of mutual destruction, 
but for an end connected with the preservation of the health 
and vigour of the race. It is necessary that the strongest 
males should propagate the race, to preserve it from feebleness 
and degeneracy. They contend with the powerful strength 
and arms with which Nature has supplied them, for the mas- 
tery of the herd. But they do not seek to shed each other’s 
blood. The vanquished yield to the law of superior strength, 
and the most powerful assumes his fitting place. 

In -the vast plains of South America, where the emanci- 


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246 THE OX. 


pated herds have regained a. certain degree of natural liberty, 
travellers have observed that, when a bullock has been slain 
for food, the herd surround the murderers of their comrade, 
and express, by loud cries and Sroans, their sympathy and 
sorrow, while tears have seemed to roll from their eyes. They 
cannot. know why the blood of their fellow should be shed, 
and his body mangled; but they shew that nature has not 
rendered them insensible to the sufferings of their comrades. 

When the Ox is merely a beast to be fattened and destroy- 
ed,—when he neither shares the toils of his master, nor par- 
ticipates in his regards,—when his instincts have been blunt- 
ed, without instruction having been supplied,—he does indeed 
Seem to become the stupid and insensible brute which we 
hold him to be. What need has he of intelligence in order 
that he may be tied to the stall, or driven to his pasture, and 
back again to the slaughter-house? Nature is Sparing of her 


mental gifts, giving to each creature that which fits it for its 


condition. What, to the victim of our gluttony and avarice, 
destined to unnatural repletion at the stall that he may be 
fattened in the shortest time, and doomed to die a cruel 


_ death, would avail the gifts of consciousness of danger, doci- 


lity, and the knowledge of what is good for him? His brief 
life would be the more embittered, and the bounties of Na- 
ture would be a cruel present. But let us look at those wild 
Oxen which have never been reduced to Slavery, as the Uri 
of our parks, or the European Oxen, which, in the fertile wil- 
derness of the New World, have regained their liberty, and 
we shall find a creature altogether different, from the stupid 
and insensible slave whom we have degraded. We shall find 
him wary of danger, resolute in his defence against the beasts 
of prey, agile and swift, and calling into action all his instincts 
for his own defence, and braving death that he may protect 
the feeble of his herd. Nay, let us regard him, even in hig 
enslaved condition, but when human reason has aided him 
with a ray of light, and we shall gee him become almost as 
docile as a dog, guarding the property of his master, nay, so 


HISTORY. 247 


far departing from his natural habits, as to mingle, for his 
master’s sake, in scenes of strife and bloodshed. 


In the vast regions of Southern Africa, peopled by tribes 
of warriors and herdsmen, cattle abound and multiply, and 
form the wealth of the little communities. The simple and 
patient Hottentots, while yet they had a country which they 
could call their own, were rich in this kind of possession ; 
and even yet, after generations of servitude, retain the habits 
and feelings of their nomadic state. The tending of cattle is 
still the favourite employment of their lives. They know the 


individuals of the herd, and address them by their names. — 


They had their backleys, or trained oxen, of which each kraal 
had at least six: they were selected from those which seemed 
the most capable of receiving instruction, and when one died 


cor became unserviceable from age, another was chosen with 


due solemnity by the elders of the tribe to supply its room. 
They were taught to become the guardians of the flocks and 
herds of the little community; and they kept watch against the 


attacks of beasts of prey. The Hyena, we are told, however 


hungry, would not venture to attack a flock guarded by two or 
three of these courageous creatures, which, when in sufficient 
numbers, would even make head against the Lion in defence 
of their charge. They kept watch against the robbers of other 
tribes. They knew all the inhabitants of the kraal, men, 
women, and children, and manifested towards them the same 
respect which a dog displays to those who live in the house 


of his master. Whilst, therefore, there was no inhabitant of 


the kraal who might not with safety have approached the 
flocks, yet, should a stranger have attempted to do so, and 


especially a European, without being accompanied by a Hot- 


tentot, he would have been in great danger: the backleys 
would have come upon him at speed, and, unless he had fire- 
arms to defend himself, or had the means of escape to a tree, 


or was within reach of the shepherds, he would surely have 


been killed.* Not only were these backleys employed to be 


* Kolben, vol. i. . 


Bet BOE WNL EN PRT AL OER AER N IIIT IES SE ARAN 


248 THE OX, 


the guides and protectors of the common flock, but others 
were trained for the purposes of war. Even still, these war- 
oxen are used by the Caffres and independent tribes of the in- 
terior. They are taught to share the fierce passions of their 
masters ; to rush upon the opposing ranks, trample the men 
under their feet, and gore them with their horns.* 

Nothing seems more unlike the dull and apathetic tem- 
perament of the Ox than a love of distinction ; yet that a feel- 
ing akin to this may exist, appears from a curious fact fre- 
quently mentioned. In the mountains of Switzerland, where 
a beautiful race of cows is reared, it is the practice to attach 
bells to the most trusty of the cows, that the sound may keep 
the herd together, and direct the herdsman to the place 
where they are pasturing. These cows are the pride of the 
cowkeeper: he has various sets of these bells, and on cer- 
tain occasions, the favourite cow has the finest and largest 
bell assigned to her, and the gayest trappings: the others © 
have inferior bells, and less ornamented collars, in a gra- 
dation downwards to those to which no distinction is awarded. 
To deprive the cows of their wonted ornaments is to inflict 
upon them a punishment which they grievously foel, mani- 
festing their sense of humiliation by piteous lowings. On 
gala days, a kind of procession takes place; the her 
in the van, and next in order comes the favour 


dsman is 
ite cow, lead- 
ing the herd, ornamented with her tinkling bells, and gay 
apparel. Should another, from any cause, be made to take 
her place, she manifests her vexation by continued lowing, 
abstains from food, and attacks with fury the rival that has 
gained her honours. A certain cow, M. Latrobe informs us, 
who had long borne the badge of distinction, had just given 
birth to a calf, and was reckoned too feeble to bear her usual 
post in the honours of the day, and even the ordinary bell was 
thought to be too heavy for her. The gay procession moved 
on, but the poor cow that had been stripped of her accus- 
tomed honours did not share in the general joy: after a few 


* Jie Vaillant, vol. ii, 


HISTORY. 249 


steps she faltered in her pace: the attendants tried to coax ; 


her on, but in vain: she stopped, and at length lay down as 
if to die. An old herdsman soon divined the cause: he 
brought from the house a- bell and collar, such as she had 
been used to bear: she no sooner felt the well-known appen- 
dage at her neck than she rose from the ground, bounded 
gaily, as if in possession of her usual health, and, taking her 
place in the van, was, from that moment, as well as ever. 
It is known, that a practice of the mountain peasants of 
Switzerland, is to collect the herds by sounding a long wooden 
pipe, whose deep and simple tones, mellowed by distance, 
delight the ear. No sooner does the well-known sound reach 
the herd, than they all obey the signal, and hasten to the 
place of rendezvous. Should one, from any cause, as from 
‘falls or weakness, be unable to keep pace with her fellows, 
she utters loud and painful lowings, as if calling for assist- 
ance, and testifying that it is want of power, and not of will, 
that makes her linger behind her comrades. The simple 
tones of the herdsman’s pipe form the well-known air of the 
Ranz de Vaches, which is known to thrill like a charm to the 


heart of the mountain Swiss, when distant from his beloved | 


land. 

Such is the creature which reason and conscience teach us 
to treat with humanity and justice. It is painful to say that 
it is too often made the victim of wanton cruelty. Who has 
not heard of those barbarous sports which are yet practised 
in the southern countries of Europe, where the bull, brought 
into the arena, is roused to phrensy, and put to a cruel 
death? The bull-fights of Spain and Italy are yet the de- 
light of all conditions of people in those countries, and afford 
the evidence of the power of habit to blunt the most natural 
feelings, and reconcile us to the most revolting spectacles. 

Throughout the kingdoms of Spain and Portugal are ex- 
tensive forests, in which large herds of cattle find support, 
almost in a state of natural wildness. It is from these herds 
that the fiercest and strongest bulls are obtained, by a kind 


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250 THE OX. 


of hunting, nearly as dangerous as the subsequent combat in 
which the victims are to engage. The country people, from 
great distances, assemble, mounted on horseback as best they 
can, and armed with long staves, terminated by long spikes. 
Lines being formed, they surround the herd, and endeavour 
to separate the bulls. This they do by galloping to a bull, 
and goading him with their spikes; the animal, enraged, 
turns upon his assailant, and pursues him; but another 
horseman attacking him in a similar manner, the animal 
turns upon his new enemy, who is in like manner relieved, 
and so on, until at length the bull, tired out and bewildered, 
is separated from his fellows. <A sufficient number having 
been treated in this manner, they are hemmed in by the 
armed horsemen, and goaded forward to the town or place 
where the future combat is to take place.* . 

The fights of the Circus itself have been described by all 
travellers who have visited these beautiful countries. The 
bull, admitted into the arena, is received with the shouts of 
the assembled spectators. Bewildered and amazed, he rushes 
forward, but is at once confronted by the Picadore on foot, 
‘armed with short darts. The animal rushes wildly on his 
opponent, who, with matchless dexterity and grace, avoids 
the onset, and plants his short darts in the neck and body of 
the victim. Bellowing with rage and pain, the wounded ani- 
mal gallops round the slaughter-house, and is confronted by 
other Picadores with the like success, until the spectators, 
satiated, permit him to be relieved from persecution, or direct 
him to be slain. But, in other cases, armed horsemen enter 
the lists, and attack the bull with lances. In this manner, 
the youthful cavaliers display, to the best advantage, their 
courage and address. But this sport is more dangerous and 
bloody than the other, for often one or more horses are mor- 
tally wounded, while shouts and screams of joy attest the 
delight of the spectators. In modern Rome, the same sports 


* Tibrary of Entertaining Knowledge. Menageries. 


death. 


HISTORY. . ae 


_ are practised, though with somewhat less of inhumanity than 


in Spain. The bulls are of the fine race of the Campagna 


di Roma, which are of larger size than those of Spain. They | 


are cruelly baited, but never put to death, though the less 
manly practice is sometimes adopted of setting upon them 
with large dogs, chiefly of the Corsican breed, which pin the 
bulls by the ears and lips. The dogs, however, are often 
the victims, the infuriated bulls catching them with their 
long horns, tossing them in the air, ite goring them to 


The Ox, in certain cases, regains his liberty, and multi- 


plies inthe natural state. Thus, in the forests of Spain and | 
Portugal, emancipated oxen, it has been said, are numerous. 


They have become more wild, swift, and wary, but have not 
deviated from the external characters of the subdued race. 
When taken, and reduced to captivity, they soon reassume 
the general habits of the domesticated breeds. In Italy, 
great numbers of cattle may be said to be nearly wild: they 
are the inhabitants of those flat and pestilential tracts which 


Stretch between the Appenines and the sea, from Naples, 


northward, including the well-known Campagna di Roma. 
To this dreary tract is applied the general term Maremma, 
which, during a period of the year, is the abode of pestilence 
and death, and is thinly strewed with inhabitants, the vic- 
tims of terrible diseases. The cattle are under the charge 


of armed herdsmen, who, when the animals are to be taken — 


to the towns, pursue them on horseback, fasten them to one 
another by the horns, and goad them onward with their long 
Spears. 

But it is in the fertile plains of South America, that the phe- 
nomenon presents itself, on the grandest scale, of the escape 
of oxen from captivity, and of their multiplication in the 


state of nature. The origin of those amazing herds which 


cover the plains of Paraguay, Buenos Ayres, and other noble 


provinees, is traced, by Spanish writers, to the arrival, by the — 


way of Brazil, of seven cows and a bull fr ‘om Andalusia, at 


Pe a me Ky en erences Cl emenet 
* © = —s a 
; ~ ee 5 


252 THE OX. 


the city of Assumption, on the Paraguay, in the year 1556. 
The owner of these animals having driven them overland to 
the Great Rio Grange or Parana, constructed a rude raft, 
and entrusted them to the care of one Gaete, who descended 
the Parana, and then, ascending the Paraguay, landed his 
precious charge at the city of Assumption. As his re- 
compense for many months of toil and danger, Gaete re- 
ceived one cow, which gave rise to the saying, common 
in these provinces, that a thing is as dear as Gaete’s cow. 
Whether all the vast herds of South America are derived 
from this humble source, may be questioned. But however 
this be, it is certain that the cattle of Europe soon multi- 
plied amazingly, found their way to the woods and rich 
Pampas, where they increased in the state of liberty, and 
now extend in countless multitudes from the southern 
boundary of Buenos Ayres, to far within the tropics to the 
north, stretching, in many cases, from the Atlantic to the 
Cordilleras. They are found in the Brazilian as well as in 
the Spanish provinces, in the wild as well as in a domesti- 
cated. state, and have extended beyond the Andes into the 
beautiful countries on the Pacific, where they are reared in 
the state of domestication. But it is in the more temperate 
parts of Paraguay, and the countries of the Rio de la Plata, 
extending westward, that their numbers have become the 
greatest, and that those marvellous herds of them are to 
be beheld, which have escaped entirely from the dominion of 
man, and fly from his presence like beasts of chase. They 
migrate in search of fresh pastures with the changes of the 
season, the strongest of the bulls assuming the guidance of 
the herd. They have deviated little from the Andalusian 
type, except that they have assumed a greater uniformity of 
colour, and that the bulls exhibit less of ferocity and bold- 
ness, as is common with other animals naturalized in Ame- 
rica. Their colour is a blackish-brown ; their size is nearly 
the same as in the original race, exceeding it in the more 
temperate countries, and falling short of it in the warmer. The 


HISTORY. 253 


power of the female to yield milk constantly diminishes with 
the heat of the climate, until, at the tropics, it does not 
amount to one-third of the ordinary quantity. They are 
reclaimed with such facility, that the wildest herds may be 
domesticated in a month. They are hunted for their hides 
by people of the country, or Gauchos, who pursue them on 
horseback at speed, forming two lines, meeting at an angle 
inthe rear. The person who jis behind at the angle or meet- 
ing of the lines, is armed with a sharp instrument, of a cres- 
cent-shape, fixed toa long handle. With this he hamstrings 
the oxen as he comes up to them, the party all the time con- 
tinuing the pursuit. When a sufficient number have been 
maimed, and left on the ground, the party returns, the prin- 
cipal hunter piercing the prostrate oxen with a spear, and 
others instantly dismounting, and stripping off the hide: the 
carcasses are left as of no value, to be devoured by vultures 
and other beasts of prey. 

Those cattle which are in a semi-domesticated state, and 
are the property of individuals, are kept in large herds. They 
are under the charge of a superintendent with several assist- 
ants, whose province it is to prevent them from straying, 
to protect them from the Jaguars, and other beasts of prey, 
and to catch those which are to be slaughtered. They are 
caught by-means of the well-known Lazo, which incessant 
practice teaches those wild people to throw with match- 
less dexterity. It consists of a plaited thong of hides, forty 
or fifty feet in length, with a noose and iron-ring at one end. 
Swinging the noose end round and round with the right arm, 
the other end being coiled over the left arm, and fixed to the 
saddle girth, they throw their singular missile, themselves 
all the while at speed, and entangle the victim by the horns, 
the neck, or by one or both legs, as may be wished, and in 
an instant hurl him to the ground. One superintendent, 
with four assistants, is reckoned sufficient for the tendence of 
from 4000 to 5000 head of cattle, often extending over a 
space of eighteen square miles of country; and this esta- 


. 
i RE iene rpc eae e P g) 


AOL ORD ITE LPT RER IIE EIN GE IS! HAINES BY 


254 THE OX. 


blishment, according to Azara, requires about 70 horses, the 
Gauchos almost living on horseback. Individual proprietors 
have often enormous herds, some, according to Spix, as many 
as 40,000 head. In Paraguay, the practice is to drive the 
cattle once a-week, or oftener, to an elevated circuit, termed 
the Rodeo; in other cases this is only done once a-year, when 
the bulls are emasculated, generally at the age of two years, 
and the cattle branded with the owners’ mark. These animals 
do not differ in appearance from those that are entirely wild. 

But, besides these wilder herds, it is common for the owners 
to keep a number of tame cattle, which are used for draught, 
or for yielding milk, which is partly made into cheese. But 
so little do the people of the country understand the making 
of butter, that the Emperor of the Brazils, in possession of 
the finest herds in the world, used to obtain the butter for 
his own use from Ireland, after-a voyage of several months. 
The flesh of these tame cattle is preferred +o that of the wild. 
They are kept in enclosures during the night, and permitted 
to pasture, during the day, in the meadows and adjoining 
plains. 

From these herds of cattle are derived those enormous 
supplies of skins which form the chief export of the countries 
of the Rio de la Plata and the interior. Azara informs us, 
that, in 1796, the export of hides from Buenos Ayres and 
Monte Video alone was from 800,000 to a million annually ; 

but, to form an idea of the magnitude of the continued car- 
nage of those noble herds, we must consider the vast and pro- 
digal consumption of the interior, where no value is set upon 
the lives of animals so bounteously supplied. They afford 
the only animal food of the settled inhabitants, who use it 
with a waste that exceeds belief, selecting the favourite parts, 
and leaving the rest in the wilderness. The animals, too, are 
killed in multitudes by the Indians, who plunder them from 
the farms, or pursue them in mere wantonness. Further, 
the mortality amongst them is excessive, from the attacks of 
wild beasts, the torments of venomous insects, which pursue 


HISTORY: 255 


them in clouds, and the effects of the barbarous treatment of — 
their wild keepers. The time, indeed, it may be believed, 
will come when those rich and beautiful lands, so blessed by 
the bounties of Nature, so-cursed by the ignorance of man, — 
in place of yielding ship-loads of hides, will support an in- 
dustrious population capable of appreciating and using the | 
natural gifts of their country. 

The Ox has thus found a new habitat more suitable for the 
increase of his numbers, than in the most fertile plains of 
Asia and Europe. He has also been carried to North America 
and its islands, wherever the settlements of Kuropeans are 
found, and equally adapts himself to these situations as 
to those which are nearer to his native climes. In the United 
States, he is cultivated with considerable care, and has the 
same useful characters communicated to him by artificial 
treatment, and the selecting of the parent stock, as in the 
countries of Europe, where attention has been paid to the 
development of his properties. 

But in the warmer regions of Hastern Asia, the Ox appears 
with such distinct form and characters, as to leave the na- 
turalist in doubt whether he ought to be regarded as a dis- 
tinct species, rather than as a variety or race. He is gene- 
rally termed the Zebu, from an Indian name; and though he 
differs greatly in size in different localities, he presents every 
where the same general character which ancient figures shew 
him to have possessed from-the earliest times. . 

The Indian Ox has a flatter and more oblique forehead than 
the Ox of western Asia and Europe; his horns are more 
Straight, short, and directed backwards; his ears are very long, 
and pendent. He is furnished with a large fleshy lump upon 
the shoulders, his haunch is very round, like that of the Gayal, 
and his limbs are slender and graceful. His skin is soft, 
and he is furnished with a large dewlap hanging down in’ 
folds. In his general form, he approaches more to the larger 
Antelopes than the Ox of the West. 

The Zebu is found throughout the whole of Hindostan, and 


256 THE OX. 


stretches all eastward through China, to Japan, and other 
islands of the East. He gradually diminishes in numbers 
beyond the Indus to the west, and in Persia gives entire 
place to the common races. He is found, however, in Ara- 
bia, having been probably carried thither from India. An 
| animal similar with respect to the possession of a dorsal 
\ hump, but probably of African descent, is numerous in Abys- 
sinia and Upper Egypt, extending along the eastern coasts 
of Africa to the Island of Madagascar and the country of 
the Caffres, and westwards from Abyssinia to the Niger. 

He was found in Syria before the Christian era, Aristotle 
distinctly mentioning the humped oxen of Syria. It has been 
observed as remarkable, that the Grecian sculptors gave a 
dewlap to their oxen somewhat like that of Eastern countries. 
No conclusion can be founded on this concidence, with respect 
to the existence of this race in Greece. The description and 
sculptures of the Greeks exhibit the common, and not the 
Indian form. Dewlaps are largely developed in all races of 
Oxen which approach the natural state; and in copying the 
wilder bulls of their own country, the sculptors of Greece had 
sufficient examples of the graceful dewlap to guide them in 
their ideal representations. In the figures of the Zodiac by 
the Egyptians and Greeks, the form of the bull is always that 
of the common races, and never of the Indian animal. On the 
' other hand, on the most ancient monuments of the, Hast, as 
| those of Elephanta, all the memorials of whose origin are 
hidden in the obscurity of the past, the representations of the 
Ox always exhibit the Zebu form. From the remotest anti- 
quity, therefore, the form of the Indian Zebu has remained 
unchanged. Nay, some have believed that the Zebu is the 
original type of the Ox, that the warmer regions of the East 
are the native country of the race, and that it is only as he 
is removed from these that he assumes the ordinary form. 
It is more natural to believe that the Indian Ox is distinct 
in the natural state. 

The Zebu differs greatly in size in different parts of Hin- 


10 


HISTORY. 257 


dostan, and other countries of the East. Like many species, 
he dwindles towards the countries of the Pacific, so that in | 
Corea and the Islands of J apan he is little larger than @ 
Hog, shewing that these countries are at the limits of the 
natural habitat of the species. The finest breeds of the 
Eastern Zebu are produced in the northern provinces of 
India. There they are tall and graceful animals, surpass- 
ing in the power of active motion any of the races of Oxen 
with which we are conversant in Europe. They are used 
for the saddle, for chariots, for-the bearing of burdens, for 
common draught, and all the labours of the field. They 
accompany the predatory armies of ‘Indian nations in thou- 
sands, carrying the materials of war. They are used in state 
processions by the Princes of India. They are guided by a 
cord passed through the septum of the nose, to which are 
attached the bridle-reins, which, when not used, rest upon 
the hump of the shoulder. Their motion is easy, and they 
trot and gallop almost as freely as a horse. They have great 
powers of endurance, frequently travelling sixty or eighty 
miles a-day. When employed in chariots or the plough, they — 
draw by a yoke, which rests upon the shoulder. They are 
exceedingly tractable, and become attached to their keepers. 
The milk-white colour is esteemed by the Hindoos, which it 
likewise was by the ancient Egyptians, as having a charac- 
ter of sanctity. Very often rich Hindoos dedicate a parti- 
cular bull of the sacred colour to Siva, when he is branded. 
by the emblem of the god, and thenceforward becomes ex-_ 
empt from the contumely of servitude. He wanders where 
he will, and no one strikes, molests, or turns him from -his 

path : he feeds in the gardens, the rice fields, or wherever he 
chooses to enter: he finds his way into the market-places 
of towns, and helps himself to the green herbs and choicest 
fruits, without any one driving him away. Impunity ren- 
ders him familiar : he will take food from the hand like a 
dog, and everywhere dainties are presented to him by simple 

R 


258 THE OX. 


devotees. These consecrated bulls are described by English 
residents as absolute pests in the villages of India, thrust- 
ing their noses into the stalls of fruiterers and pastry-cooks, 
robbing the peasants of their little treasure, and helping 
themselves to whatever they please. The reverence, how- 
ever, paid to the Bull and the Cow is not extended to the 
emasculated Ox, who is treated with the utmost harshness, 
under the solitary exception of obedience to the law common 
to the Hindoos and Jews, of not muzzling the Ox when he 
treadeth out the corn. 

Examples of the larger as well as smaller races of these 
animals have been frequently brought to England, and they 
_, have been made to cross the common breeds of the country. 
' The mixed offspring are fruitful with one another, and the 
_ characteristic hump disappears with the first cross. In the 
» year 1832, a bull and cow of the finer breed were exhibited 
at the Christmas Smithfield Show in London, under the name 
of Nagpore cattle. The following account of them, derived 
from Mr Perkins, to whom they belong, is given by Mr 
Youatt, in his valuable Treatise on Cattle, contained in the 
Library of Useful Knowledge. 

“They were bred by Lieutenant-Colonel Skinner, at his 
farm at Danah, near Pokah, on the borders of the Bichaneer 
desert, 100 miles to the westward of Delhi. They are not 
Buffaloes, but of the highest breed of Indian cattle. They 
are used in India by the higher orders to draw their state- 
carriages, and are much valued for their size, speed, and en- 
durance, and sell at very high prices. These specimens 
arrived at Calcutta, a distance of 1400 miles, in January 
1829, and were then something under six months old. They 
were sent as a present to Mr Wood, who-was then residing 
at Calcutta, and by whom they were presented to Mr Perkins. 
Colonel Skinner has a large stock of them, and six or seven 
beasts are always kept saddled to carry the military dis- 
patches. They remain saddled three or four hours, and if 
not wanted in that time, fresh ones are brought to relieve 


HISTORY. . 209 


their companions, They will travel with a soldier on their 
back fifteen or sixteen hours a-day, at the rate of six miles , 
an hour. Their action is particularly fine, nothing like that | 
of the English cattle, with the sideway circular action of / 
their hind-legs ; the Nagpore cattle bring their hind-legs | 
under them in as straight a line as the Horse. They are — 
very active, and can clear a five-barred gate with the greatest 
ease. Mr Perkins has a calf which has leaped over an iron 
fence higher than any five-barred gate; and the bull fre- 
quently jumps over the same fence in order to get at the 
water, and, when he has drunk his fill, leaps back again. 
The bull was in high condition when exhibited. He is em- 
ployed in a light cart in various jobs about the farm. Some- 
times he goes fore-horse in the waggon-team to deliver corn ; 
he also drags the bush-harrow, and draws the light roller 
over the ploughed land. He is very docile and tractable 
when one man drives him and attends upon him, but he has 
now and then shewn symptoms of dislike to others. He is 
fed entirely on hay, except that, when he works, a little bran 
is given to him, and in the turnip season, he is treated occa- 
sionally with a few slices of Swedes, of which he is very fond. 
He was at first very troublesome to shoe, and it was neces- 
sary to erect a break in order to confine him. He was un- 
willing to go into it for some time, but now walks in it very 
contentedly. He is very fond of being noticed ; and often, 
when he is lying down, if any one to whom he is accustomed 
goes and sits down upon him and strokes him over the face, 
he will turn round and put his head on their lap, and lie there 
contentedly as long as they please. The cow is at grass with 
the milch.cows, and comes up with them morning and even- 
ing, when they are driven to be milked.” 

But the Ox extends to another division of the globe, 
where we may expect him to exhibit modifications dependent 
on the peculiar conditions under which he is placed, and 
which exert so great an influence on the development of 
animal forms. But a vast part of the African continent is 


260 THE OX, 


yet untrodden by the feet of naturalists, and we are left 
to draw our knowledge of its animals from the uncertain 
notices of travellers, often too much occupied with the dan- 
gers around them, to be able to afford us the details required. 
We know, however, that the Ox, under various modifications, 
abounds throughout those vast countries, is everywhere sub- 
jected to servitude, affords milk and flesh to the inhabitants, 
and assists them in their rude labours ; but of the species or 
races, our knowledge is in a high degree imperfect. So far 
as we know, the common Ox prevails along all the countries 
on the Mediterranean, and a part of the shores of the Atlan- 
tic ; but how much it occupies of the interior, travellers, the 
most observant, have failed to inform us. The same form 
appears in Southern Africa, in the races which are cultivated 
by the Hottentots, the Caffres, and other tribes stretching to 
the deserts of the interior. The oxen of these races are of 
small size, like those of the mountainous parts of Europe, 
and are possessed of great activity and power of endurance. 
But, in Africa, the Ox likewise presents itself under a dif. 
ferent form, having the large hump of the Indian Zebu, but 
being distinguished from the latter animal by large, light, 
and spreading horns. ‘This race appears in Abyssinia, 
whence it extends down the Nile to the tropic of Cancer, and 
perhaps beyond it, westward through the unexplored regions 
of the countries of the Negroes to the Niger, and southward 
again through 40° of latitude to the country of the Caffres. 
It thus seems to extend over nearly all the burning regions 
of the continent, and it is difficult to believe that an animal 
so diffused is not indigenous to the country which produces 
it. It may be conjectured, indeed, that the African is merely 
the Asiatic Zebu, transported from the East to Western 
Africa. Though we have nothing to invalidate this opinion, 
it certainly.seems to be a very violent hypothesis; and a 


more natural supposition is, that an animal occupying all 


the intertropical regions of Africa, is as proper to the country 
itself as the Zebu of India is to the countries of the East. 


HISTORY. 261 


Unfortunately, the accounts of travellers are not sufficiently 
precise to enable us to compare the Indian with the African 
Ox: and it is doubtful if a single specimen of the Humped 
Ox of Africa has been brought to Europe. 

Bruce, on entering Abyssinia by the mountain of Taranto, 
describes the bulls and cows as of exquisite beauty, as being © 
completely white, with large dewlaps hanging down to the 
knees, with horns and hoofs completely well turned, with 
the horns wide, and the hair like silk. In another place, 
he informs us that, in the fertile and populous province of 
Woggora, the oxen have large and beautiful horns, exceed- 
ingly wide, and that they have bosses on their backs like 
camels. Other writers agree as to the great size of the horns 
of the humped cattle of Africa. Captain Clapperton describes 
the race of Bornon, likewise humped, in the very heart of the 
continent, as being of a white colour and large size, and as 
having horns, very light, of three feet seven inches in length, 
measured along the curve. We cannot say, indeed, that the, 

‘mere tendency to a large development of horn constitutes a \ 
specific distinction ; but as this is a character which remark- | 
ably distinguishes the humped cattle of Africa from those of | 
India, it furnishes a reasonable ground for believing that the / 
humped cattle of Africa have characters proper to themselves, 
and are as much an original race as the Zebus of India. 

The accumulation of fatty matter on the shoulder.of the 
Ox, may not unreasonably be regarded as a natural provision 
for fitting him for countries of intense heat. The cultivated 
Ox of England accumulates fat largely within the body ; but 
this might not consist with the exercise of the animal func- 
tions in a climate of high temperature ; and, therefore, the 
fatty secretion may be placed externally on a particular part 
of the body. In certain races of sheep in Africa the same 
tendency is observed, lumps of fatty matter appearing be-— 
neath the skin, on the shoulders and head, and in other races, 
as has been shewn in another place, on the tail, which be- 
comes of an enormous magnitude. The hump of the Camel 


262 THE OX, 


seems to be a similar provision for the accumulation of nutri- 
ent matter, and may be supposed to be connected with the 
extraordinary patience under abstinence from food, which 
distinguishes this child of the desert. The fatty hump of the 
Ox of warmer countries, may thus be regarded as an adapta- 
tion of the animal to the condition in which it is placed. 

Another provision for fitting the Ox of warmer countries 
to the circumstances of his situation, is the possession of a 
light, sinewy, and active form. The heavy Ox of the plains 
of Holland and England, could not subsist in the arid climate, 
and on the scanty herbage, of the African desert. Hence we 
find the Oxen of Africa of less bulk of body, and more agile 
in their motions, than those in the temperate countries of 
abundant herbage. All over Africa, these animals are em- 
ployed in laborious journeys, and for the bearing. of heavy 
loads. Their appearance and employment in these arid coun- 
tries are thus described by a recent traveller : 

‘““ The bullock is the bearer of all the grain and other 
articles to and from the markets. A small saddle of plaited 
rushes is laid upon him, when sacks made of goat-skins, and 
filled with corn, are lashed on his broad and able back. A 
leather thong is passed through the cartilage of his nose, 
and serves as a bridle, while on the top of the load is mount- 
ed the owner, his wife, or his slave. Sometimes the daughter 
or the wife of a rich shouaa will be mounted on her particu- 
lar bullock, and precede the loaded animals, extravagantly 
adorned with amber, silver, rings, coral, and all sorts of 
finery, her hair streaming with fat, a black ring of kohol, at 
least an inch wide, round her eyes, and, I may Say, arrayed 
for conquest at the crowded market. Carpets or tobes are 
then spread on her clumsy palfrey ; she sits Jjambe deca, jambe 
dela, and, with considerable grace, ‘guides her animal by the 
nose. Notwithstanding the peaceableness of his nature, her 
vanity still enables her to torture him into something like 


caperings and curvettings.’’* 


* Travels in Africa, by Major Denham and Captain Clapperton. 


HISTORY. 263 


In the country of the Cape, the value of the agile form and 
powers of endurance of the African Ox, are shewn in the ser- 
’ vices he performs. These oxen are used for carrying bur- 
dens, in the manner of mules and pack-horses in other coun- 
tries. A traveller, describing this employment, observes : 
“ We proceeded nearly the whole way at a brisk step, some- 
times trotting, and at other times galloping, while the three 
bushmen, who drove the pack-oxen on before us, hurried 
them over the rocky ground at so extraordinary a rate, that, 
even on horseback, I found it not easy to keep up with them ; 
and often, when the surface was so thickly covered with 
stones and large fragments of rock, that my horse could 
scarcely find where to place his foot, I was obliged to call . 
out to them to slacken their pace.”* 
These oxen are likewise trained to the saddle. They are 
broken in, we are told, when they are about a year old. A 
) slit being made in the cartilage between the nostrils, large 
enough to admit the finger, a strong stick, stripped of its 
bark, is passed through, and to each end of it is fixed a thong 
of hide, of length sufficient to reach round the neck, and serve 
as reins. The saddle is formed of sheep-skins.with the wool 
on, and the stirrups consist of a thong across the saddle, with 
| loops for the feet. While the animal’s nose is still sore, he is 
mounted and put in training, and, in a week or two, is gene- 
rally rendered sufficiently obedient to the rider. “ The faci- 
lity and adroitness,” says Mr Burchell, “ with which the Hot- 
tentots manage the Ox, has often excited my admiration.: It 
; ; is made to walk, trot, or. gallop, at the will of its master ; 
and being longer legged, and rather more lightly made than 
the Ox in England, travels with greater ease and expedition, 
walking three or four miles in an hour, trotting five, and 
galloping, on an average, seven or eight.” These oxen are 
likewise used in the drawing of those covered waggons which 3 
the Dutch settlers have introduced, and with which they 
transport their merchandise, and perform their long journeys — 


* Burchell’s Travels in Africa. 


264 THE OX. 


from the interior. These waggons, though now much smaller 
than those used by the earlier boors, are still very weighty 
vehicles, drawn by teams of ten or twelve oxen. They are 
usually driven by a Hottentot, who manages his enormous 
team with perfect skill, and without the aid of reins. He 
sits behind, holding in his hand a tremendous whip of plaited - 
thong, the handle of which is twelve or fourteen feet in 
length. He uses it with ease, cracking it loudly over the 
heads of the animals, and, when necessary, hitting an offend- 
ing bullock: but his chief instrument of guidance is the 
voice: he speaks to the animals by name, directing them to 
the right or left, to stop or to quicken their pace, and enfore- 
ing his commands, when necessary, by the stroke of his ter- 
rible lash. When the team is large, a boy, usually a Hot- 
tentot, leads the foremost oxen by a thong fastened about 
their horns. 

But to turn from the Oxen of distant countries to those 
whose economical uses are so important to the civilized na- 
tions of Europe, we find that the animals, though agreeing 
in certain common characters, yet very greatly differ in their 
temperament, form, and uses, with the physical condition of 
the countries in which they are reared, and the artificial treat- 
ment to which they are subjected. It is upon the supplies of 
food that the size of the animals seems mainly to depend. 
Wherever food is supplied in abundance, the Ox becomes 
enlarged in bulk ; and wherever food is deficient, whatever be 

, the nature of the climate, his size becomes less. The Ox of 
| Barbary is as diminutive as that of the Highlands of Scot- 

land, because the grasses, his natural food, are burned up 

) during a great part of the year, leaving plants for him to 
subsist upon as innutritious as the heaths of the northern 
mountains. But where the grasses abound, and where the 
heat of the climate is not sufficiently great to wither them 
up during a great part of the year, the Ox assumes an entirely 
different character with respect to magnitude and strength. 
The largest Oxen in Europe are to be found extending west- 


; ; HISTORY. 265 


ward by the Ukraine, and the rich valley of the Danube, 


through Hungary, the more fertile parts of Germany, part a. 


Denmark, Holland, and to England. In the richer parts 
of other countries on either side of this tract, as in the Ma- 
remma of Italy, and the finer valleys of Switzerland, and in 
certain parts of Spain and France, are also to be found large 
Oxen, the size of the animals always being in proportion to 
the natural fertility of the pastures. Art, indeed, by sup- 
plying cultivated food, can remedy the effects, of natural 
scarcity; but, in a general sense, we find that always the 
larger breeds are formed in countries of abundant herbage. 


The British Islands present, in the productiveness of the. 


‘soil, such extremes of fertility and barrenness, as enable us 
to mark the constancy of this law in a greater degree perhaps 
than in any other country of the same extent. Over the more 
elevated parts of the country, where the heaths, carices, and 
innutritious junci, form the principal part of the herbage, the 
Oxen are of small stature: as the grasses and leguminous 
herbage plants become mixed with the others, the size of the 


Oxen becomes enlarged, and still more when artificial food is | 


added to the natural; and in the richest plains of all, where 
the natural productions of the soil, and the resources of con- 
tinued cultivation, are combined, the animals acquire their 


greatest development of form. The Ox of the Sutherland ~ 


mountains, and the Ox of the Yorkshire vales, present to the 
eye a diversity of size and aspect, such as we might hold in 
other cases to distinguish species; but these extremes are con- 
nected by all the intervening gradations from the smallest to 
the largest. Looking to bulk of body as a character, we may be 
said to possess two general classes of breeds in this country ; 
first, those which are proper to the more mountainous and less 


OO 


fertile districts ; and, secondly, those which are proper to | 
the plains and richer country. The first class comprehends } 


the breeds of Wales, of the mountains of Scotland, and of the 
high lands of Ireland, as the Pembroke, the West Highland, 


the Kerry; the second comprehends the Long-horned breed 


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266 THE OX. 


and its varieties, the highly cultivated breed of Short-horns, 
and the Hereford: and, again, there is a class of breeds in- 
termediate between the smaller breeds of the mountains and 
the larger races of the plains, as the Galloway, the Angus, 
and the beautiful breed of North Devon. 

But, besides the effects of the natural and acquired fertility 
of districts in modifying the form and characters of these 
animals, so as to form varieties, art and a fitting selection of 
| the breeding parents exercise an influence scarcely less im- » 
portant. Experience shews that the characters of the Ox, as 
‘ of all animals subjected to domestication, are communicated 
with surprising constancy to the young, and become perma- 
nent by reproduction between similar individuals. Not only 
are the properties of form so transmitted, but those pecu- 
liarities of temperament which render the animals fitted to 


particular uses, as for the exertion of strength in the yoke, 


for the secretion of fat, or the production of milk. Besides, 
then, the characters of breeds which are the result of natural 
causes, there is a class of characters the result of breeding 
| and artificial treatment. Some of the finest of the breeds of 
| England may be termed artificial, with relation to the means 
employed to give them their distinctive characters : such was 
_the variety of the Long-horned breed formed by Bakewell, 
| such is the modern Durham improved by Colling, and such is 
| the highly esteemed breed of Hereford, perfected by Tomkins. 
" These breeds, the finest in the world with respect to their 
economical uses, although bearing an affinity to the parent 
stocks from which they were derived, have had those peculiar 
properties which fit them for the uses for which they are de- 
signed mainly communicated by the art of the breeder. 

Of the properties which artificial breeding is employed to 
eall forth, that which holds the first place in this country is, 
an early maturity of the animal, and a tendency to the secre- 
tion of fat. But the production of milk is likewise important, 
and particular breeds are valued for the faculty of yielding 
this substance in abundance. Before describing the various 


THE DAIRY. 267 


breeds of the country in detail, it will be well to direct at- 
tention to the subject of Milk and its products, as connected 
with the economical value of breeds, and, in certain cases, 
serving to distinguish them. 


THE DAIRY. 


MILK is the liquid food derived from the blood of mam- 
miferous animals for the nourishment of their young. It is 
secreted in glandular sacs termed mamme, the number and 
disposition of which vary in different tribes of animals. Some-_ 
times they consist of a_single pair, as in the female of the- 
Horse, the Sheep, the Goat; sometimes of more than one 
pair connected together, as in the Cow; and sometimes of 
several pairs, extending along the lower part of the abdomen, 
as in the Hog, the Dog, the Cat. These organs are filled 
with innumerable glandular lobes, from the size of a millet- 
seed upwards, through which the blood, circulating in myriads | 
of vessels finer than the finest hair, gives off the milky secre- 
tion. From these lobes proceed little ducts or tubes, which, 
gradually uniting, form larger ducts, and then reservoirs or 
sinuses, which communicate with the papille or nipples. The 
milk is secreted at the birth of the young, and continues to 
be supplied for a longer or shorter period, according to its 
wants. It differs somewhat in its composition in different 
species ; but in all of them it is a whitish liquid, opaque, and 
of a slightly saccharine taste. It consists essentially of wa- 
ter, holding in solution and suspension various substances, 
some of which can be readily separated from the rest. Of 
these the principal are, 1. An oily substance, which, from its 
less density, rises to the surface, and, being agitated, forms 
butter ; 2. An albuminous matter, which, by the action of 
certain substances, coagulates, and forms curd or cheese; 
and, 3. A species of sugar, which can likewise be obtained 
separately from the other constituents. 


268 THE OX. 


Man, deriving his first nourishment from the breast of his 
parent, must, in every age, have been taught by his reason 
to apply to his uses the milk of his flocks and herds. From 
the earliest times, accordingly, we read of the milk of Goats, 
and Sheep, and Kine, as being the food of our species, either 
in its natural state, or separated into those bland and nutri- 
tive substances which, by the easiest arts, can be derived 
from it. When Abraham sat at the opening of his tent, in 
the heat of the day, in the plains of Mamre, “ He lift up his 
_ eyes, and looked, and, lo, three men stood by him : and, when 

he saw them, he ran to meet them from the tent-door, and 
bowed himself toward the ground, and said, My Lord, if now 
I have found favour in thy sight, pass not away, I pray thee, 
from thy servant. Let a little water, I pray you, be fetched, 
and wash your feet, and rest yourselves under the tree: and 
I will fetch a morsel of bread, and comfort ye your hearts ; 
after that ye shall pass on; for therefore are ye come to your 
servant. And they said, So do as thou hast said. And 
Abraham hastened into the tent unto Sarah, and said, Make 
ready quickly three measures of fine meal, knead it, and make 
cakes upon the hearth. And Abraham ran unto the herd, 
and fetched a calf, tender and good, and gave it unto a young 
man; and he hasted to dress it. And he took Butter and 
Milk, and the calf which he had dressed, and set it before 
them; and he stood by them under the tree, and they did 
eat.” The scene, apart from the mission of the heavenly 
guests, might represent the hospitality of the wandering 
Syrians at the present hour: and all over the East, from 
Aleppo to the Ganges, the milk of flocks and herds supplies 
to the inhabitants a mild and grateful food. 

The earliest writers of Greece and Rome speak of cheese 
and milk as a food familiar to every one. In the fatal cave 
of the Cyclops, Ulysses finds the milk of Goats and Sheep 
stored in baskets of osier, the shelves bending under loads 

‘of cheeses; and innumerable other allusions to this early 
food of mankind are scattered through the writings of the 


THE DAIRY. 269 


poets, philosophers, and historians of Greece. But the Greeks, 
living in the country of the olive; made no use of butter, 
and became only acquainted with it from those whom, in the 
arrogance of their hearts, they chose to style barbarians. 
Aristotle says of milk, that it consists of two parts, the 
cheesy and the watery ; and it is only in another place that 
he refers, incidentally as it were, to ‘the oily matter which 
rises to the surface. Hippocrates, who wrote in the fifth 
century before Christ, speaking of the Scythians, says, that 
they poured the milk of their mares into wooden vessels, 
and agitated it violently, which caused the fat part, which 
was light, to rise to the surface, becoming what they call 
butter; and Herodotus, who was contemporary with him, 
mentions, that they placed the milk in deep wooden vessels, 
and caused it to be agitated by their slaves. Both writers 
manifestly speak of something which was new to their own 
customs; and, for many centuries afterwards, we know that 
the Greeks made use of cheese and oil, but not of butter. 
Dioscorides, who wrote thirty-one years before Christ, seems 
to have been the first of the Greeks who suggested to his 
countrymen that this food of the barbarians might be used 
for diet. He says, that it might be melted, and poured 
over pulse and other vegetables, instead of oil; but ages 
elapsed before the Greeks adopted the customs, in this re- 
spect, of the nations they despised. 

The Romans, in like manner, although they made large 
use of cheese, were ignorant of the use of butter, until they 
had extended their conquests among the Gauls, Germans, 
and Britons; and it was not until the age of the empire, 
that they began to make use of it as an ointment in their 
baths, and ultimately as food. They lived in the land of the 
olive and the vine; and their rustic writers, while they treat 
largely of milk, cheese, and oil, say nothing of the prepara- 
tion of butter. On the other hand, we learn, from many of 
their writers, that it was familiar to the Gothic and Celtic 
nations of Northern Europe. Pliny affirms that the barbar- 


270 THE OX. 


ous nations made not only cheese but butter, which they 
used as an agreeable food. He says, that they made it from 
the milk of the Goat, the Sheep, and the Cow; but most 
commonly from that of the Cow, although the milk of the 
Ewe produced the fattest butter. He describes the form of 
the vessel employed in making it, which seems to have been 
similar to that now in use. The northern nations were like- 
wise acquainted with the use of cheese, although some of the 
Roman writers declare that they knew not how to prepare 
it, which can only mean, that they did not do so after the 
Roman fashion; for Pliny himself, who denies this know- 
ledge to the Germans, describes their manner of making 
cheese, by rendering the milk sour, and pressing the whey 
from the curd. Cesar says of the same people, that the 
greater part of their food consisted of milk, cheese, and flesh. 
Strabo confirms the testimony of Cesar; and Tacitus states 
that the food of the Germans was of the simplest kind, 
namely, wild fruits, game recently killed, or concrete milk, 
which must mean milk rendered concrete by curdling it. Of 
the Britons, Cesar observes, that those of the interior, for 
the most part, did not sow corn, but lived on milk and flesh. 
And Strabo states, that some of them, though they had abun- 
dance of milk, were so ignorant as not to know how to make 
cheese. But if some of them only were thus ignorant, the 
rest must have possessed the knowledge; and we learn, 
from other sources, that the Celte of the wilds of Britain, 
where the Roman arms never reached, were familiar with 
this early food of the people of the East. They had learned 
to prepare it, it may be believed, before Romulus drew milk 
from the teats of his Wolf, or before the city of the Seven 
Hills had a name. 

All the ruminating animals subjected to domestication are 
capable of yielding milk to their protectors; and all the mem- 
bers of the great Western, and even the Negro, family of man- 
kind, make use of it as food. It is obtained from the domestic 
Cow, the Asiatic and African Zebu, the Buffalo, the Yak, the 


THE DAIRY. 271 


Camel, the Goat, the Sheep, the Rein-deer. It is yielded 
likewise by the Mare and the Ass. The milk of the rumi- 
nating tribes is the richest in cream and cheese, and that of 


- the Equine family is the most abundant in saccharine prin- 


ciples, and approaches nearest to that of the human species. 
The milk of Mares is used by the Kalmuks and other East- 
ern Asiatics. ‘The Chinese, who are of the same family of 
mankind, make scarcely any use of milk as food ; and the Red 
Men of America, who are the nearest connected by their phy- 
siological characters with the Eastern Asiatics, manifest the 
like indifference to it; and, until the present hour, have not 
learned to tame the milk-bearing animals of their country, the 
Rein-deer and the Musk Ox of their regions of snow, and 
the Bisons of their rich savannahs and boundless forests. 
Passing from Eastern Asia into its innumerable islands, we 
find that milk is scarcely at all used by the inhabitants. To 
the savage tribes of Borneo, New Guinea, and New Holland, 
this salutary food is unknown. 

Of all the ruminating animals, the Cow is that which 
yields her milk the most freely, and in the largest quantity. 
This animal possesses two pairs of mamme united together, 
forming a large udder, whereas the Sheep, the Goat, and the 


Deer, possess only one pair. She gives her milk beyond the 


period of maternal solicitude, and in quantity far more than 
suffices to nourish her own offspring. Her milk holds a 
middle place between that of the Ovine family and the Equine, 
with respect to the production of cheese, butter, and sugar, 
and it is more agreeable to the taste than any other. The 
milk of the Buffalo is more watery than that of the Cow, 
and the cream and butter are colourless. The milk of the 
Yak is rich, but, like that of the other Bisons, has the odour 
of musk. 

The Camel, inhabiting the vast deserts of Asia, and ex- 
tending over a part of Africa, yields milk which may be used 
as food. There are two species, the Bactrian Camel, having 
two large protuberances on the back, being adapted for the 


272 . vs - THE OX. 


colder deserts, and extending from the Caspian Sea eastward 
through Central Asia to the Indian Ocean; and the Arabian 
Camel, having one protuberance only, and being fitted for 
warmer climates and more steril deserts. The female of the 
former species is little used for yielding milk, because, in 
the countries which she inhabits, other animals better suited 
to that end are found. Nevertheless, her milk is sometimes 
used by the Eastern nations to produce, by fermentation, an 
inebriating liquor. The other species of Camel is the trea- 
sure of the wandering Arabs, and has so long been subjected 
to domestication, that not a trace of it has been found in the 
wild state. The conformation and habits of this animal are 
suited to its condition. “Its broad cleft hoof, covered with a 
callous skin, does not sink in the sand, and suits itself 
readily to the sharp stones and pebbles with which the sur- 
face may be covered. It bears thirst and hunger better than 
any known creature: it feeds on the withered herbage, the 
thorny shrubs, and bitter plants of the desert, and can take 
into its stomach a supply of food for the wants of a long 
journey. In its stomach is developed a series of deep cells 
for containing water; and when the Arabs, on their distant 
journeys, and in danger of perishing from thirst, are com- 
pelled to kill their faithful Camel, its store of water is pro- 
cured as pure and wholesome as from a fountain. The milk 
of the female is made use of by the people as food; it is 
serous, and nauseous in taste to the stranger, but to the 
Arab it proves a resource beyond all price in the burning 
wilds which he inhabits. 

The Goat, we have seen, is spread over all the old conti- 
nent, and many of its islands. The female yields milk in 
considerable abundance, and nearly as freely as the Cow her- 
self; and she readily submits to be the fosternurse of other 
animals, and treats her adopted offspring with affection. Her 
milk is thick, more abounding in cheese than that of the 
Cow, and plentiful in cream. It has a peculiar taste and — 


odour, to which use reconciles those who feed on it, and it is 
. 10 


THE DAIRY. io 


eminently nourishing and salubrious. The butter which it 
yields is of a firm consistence, and nearly as white as snow. 
The cheese has a strong and peculiar flavour, not ungrateful 
to those who are accustomed to it. It is produced in all the 
parts of Europe where the Goat is reared, and largely in the 
Levant, Italy, Spain, and other countries of the Mediter- 
ranean. | 

The Ewe yields milk, but not so abundantly, freely, or for 
so long a period, as the Goat. “It is the most productive of 
cream of any kind of milk; but the butter which it yields is 
of a soft consistence, leaving a fatty impression, like tallow, 
in the mouth. The cheese has a strong stimulating flavour, 
which increases with age. It is largely produced in some of 
the more mountainous parts of Europe, furnishing a food 
grateful to the people of the countries that produce it, but 
far inferior in general estimation to the cheese of the Cow. 

At the limits, and beyond them, of the region of the 
Goat and the Sheep, exists a creature, fitted by a boun- 
teous Providence to subsist on the herbs of the arctic zone, 
and yield its milk for human support, in lands of ice and snow. 
The Reindeer inhabits the glacial regions of Europe and 
Asia, migrating along the snowy mountains of the interior, 
almost to the line of the Caucasus. In America, too, it is 
found, but with characters proper to that continent; and 
there it is the subject of persecution by savage hunters, who 
Seem incapable of rising even to the pastoral state. But, in 
Europe, the Reindeer has been reduced to servitude by a 
race of men seemingly placed beyond the limits of humanized 
society, but possessed of arts which tribes of barbarous hun- 
ters do not acquire. The Laplanders, in scanty numbers, 
are spread over the extreme north of Europe, occupying a 
country of 300 miles by 500 on the Arctic Ocean. Distinct 
in aspect, character, and speech, from the Scandinavian 
people in contact with them,—their swarthy colour, their 
dark eyes, and black hair, indicate a southern origin; and 
their simple and expressive language exhibits a striking 

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274 THE OX. 


affinity with those of the countries of the East. They are a 
remnant, it may be believed, of ancient settlers in Europe, 
driven by stronger enemies into regions of almost perpetual 


winter. They have tamed the Wild Deer of their country, 


and rendered it a substitute for the Sheep, the Ox, nay, for 
the Horse, of happier climes. They derive from it milk, and 
know how to fabricate butter and cheese. They separate 
the butter by agitating the milk with their hands, and em- 
ploy herbs to coagulate thé curd. They prepare, from the 
milk, many simple delicacies, which they use with the wild 
fruits of their brief summer. In the season of their dreary 
winter, the milk of the Doe freezes as soon as it is drawn 
from the teats, and in this state it is preserved, to be thawed 
when required for use. The Doe yields about the same 
quantity of milk as the Goat, and it is rich in caseous matter. 
Some of the wealthier Laplanders have as many as a thou- 
sand head of those fleet and powerful Deers: the less affluent 
have herds of 300 or less. 

The milk of the Mare is used only in those boundless 
plains of Central Asia, where the Horse can be reared in 
numerous herds. It contains a larger proportion of sugar 
than that of the ruminating quadrupeds, but less of caseine, 
or the matter of cheese, and oil. It yields curd, but the 
eream is in small quantity. From the abundance of the 
saccharine principle, it readily undergoes the vinous fermen- 
tation, and the wandering tribes have long learned to con- 
vert it into a fermented liquor, which they use in excess. 
They have even attained the art of separating the alcohol by 
distillation, long, it is probable, before the alchymists of the 
West had discovered the Aqua Vite which they fancied was 
to confer.upon them immortality. The Western Tartars 


- gtill use the milk of their mares; but, from the diminished 


number of Horses, in less quantity than in former ages ; for 
these tribes, now controlled by the powerful sway of a vigo- 
yous government, have become less predatory, and cultivate 
the ruminating animals more than the Horse. But the Kal- 


THE DAIRY. 275 


muks, and other Eastern Asiatics, still make ‘considerable 
use of the milk of their numerous Mares. 

The milk of the Ass possesses nearly the same properties 
as that of the Mare, but it contains still less of oil and 
the matter of cheese. It has been used from early times as 
@ medicament. It is sweet and wholesome, and, from the 
small quantity of oil which it contains, it is the most easily 
assimilated by the digestive organs of any kind of milk. The 
butter which may be obtained from it by long agitation, is 
soft and insipid, and possesses the property of mixing again 
with the whey. 

Milk, like all the secretions of the animal body, is a very 
compound substance. It consists of about 90 per cent. of 
water, holding in solution and suspension the substances 
which enter into its composition. These are, 1st, The matter 
of butter, diffused in myriads of globules throughout the 
fluid; 2d, Caseine, or the matter of cheese, which is held 
partly in solution, and partly in suspension ; 3d, Lactine, or 
the sugar of milk; 4¢4, An animal extract, like that yielded 
by flesh, various soluble salts, and, in some cases, a quantity 
of free acid. 

When milk is suffered to remain at rest, it separates 
slowly into two parts. The lighter globules of oil rise to 
the surface, carrying with them a portion of the caseous : 
matter and serum, and forming the unctuous coat termed 
cream. The rising of the cream is favoured by employing 
shallow vessels, and the separation continues for twenty-four 
hours or more, according to the kind of milk, and the tem- 
perature of the air. The entire oil does not separate, but a 
portion of it remains suspended in the liquid. When the 
cream is removed, the remaining liquid is still opaque, is of 
a bluish-white colour, and has had its density increased by 
the removal of the lighter globules. This substance, in com- 
mon language termed Skimmilk, is perfectly nutritive, con- 
taining nearly all the caseous and saccharine principles, with 
a certain portion of the butyraceous. . 


ean et ATA aaa 


- - 
pend EU Xs 
Se 


. 
Ce od 
ome eet ee 


ee, 


eae Or ni os 


276 |. THE OX. 


When cream is agitated for a time, or when the entire 
milk, without separation of the cream, is agitated, the buty- 
raceous globules collect and adhere together, forming a soft 
solid, which is Butter, and which floats in the liquid. The 
separation of the butter, which takes place suddenly, is per- 
formed by the familiar process of churning, and in certain 
countries by agitating the milk in bags of hide or leather. 
What remains after the separation of the butter is termed 
Buttermilk. Buttermilk is therefore merely milk deprived 
of its butter, and still contains the caseous and other con- 
stituents. 

Butter thus obtained has the properties of an expressed 
oil, and fuses at about the temperature of the human body. 
It is a very compound substance, being resolvable into various 
animal fats and acids; and, further, it is not obtained pure 
by the mechanical means employed to separate it, but retains 
a portion of caseine, serum, and the soluble matter of the 
milk. When exposed to the air, it speedily undergoes a 
change, and becomes rancid. To preserve it from decompo- 
sition, it is mixed with salt’ and other substances. The 
people of the warmer countries of the East ‘subject it to 
fusion, by which means the extraneous matters are sepa- 
rated. It is then termed Ghee, in which state it is used by 
the Hindoos and other Asiatics. The Arabs consume it in 
enormous quantities. Burckhardt informs us, that it is a 
eommon practice among all classes to drink every morning 
a coffee-cupful of ghee. The taste for it is universal, and 
the poorest persons will expend half their daily income, in 
order that they may enjoy their melted butter in the morn- 
ing and at noon. Large quantities of this substance, accord- 
ingly, are yearly shipped for Arabia from Abyssinia and 
Egypt. 

_ The butter of milk, it has been seen, is separated by 
means purely mechanical ; the caseous or cheesy portion is 
obtained by causing the albuminous matter of the milk to co- 
here or coagulate. When milk, with or without separation 


THE DAIRY. oad 


of its cream, is kept for a time, the caseous matter diffused 
through it, or dissolved in it, coagulates and forms curd. 
This coagulum envelopes the parts which still remain liquid, 
and renders the whole of a gelatinous consistence. By 
pressure, and breaking the coagulum, the greater part of the 
liquid readily separates, and the curd, being compressed, 
forms cheese. But the process of coagulation may be has- 
tened by the mixture of various substances. All the acids 
possess the property of coagulating milk, even at common 
temperatures, and more readily when assisted by heat. Even 
alcohol, gum, sugar, and soluble neutral salts, produce the 
formation of curd. Certain vegetable principles, as tannin, 
and the juices of numerous plants, likewise coagulate milk, 
as an infusion of the stems or leaves of sorrel, of butterwort, 
of ladies’ bedstraw, of the flowers of the artichoke, and of 
the roots of the marsh-marigold. But the substance the 
most approved of for producing coagulation is runnet, whic 

is prepared by macerating the stomach of a sucking animal 
in water, so as to extract the gastric juice, of which a very 
minute quantity, contained in the infusion, suffices to coagu- 
late a large quantity of milk. As acids promote the coagu- 
lation of milk, so the alkalies prevent it, by rendering the 
caseous matter soluble. When, therefore, soda, potassa, or 
ammonia, exists in milk, coagulation will not take place 


until the alkalies are neutralized by the addition of acids, or 


by their spontaneous formation in the milk. ; 

After the curd has been formed, either by the slow forma- 
tion of acids in the milk, or by the addition of coagulating 
media, the curd is broken, and the liquid which it envelopes 
is separated by pressure. The expressed liquid is Whey ; 
and whey, therefore, is merely milk deprived of its cheesy 
matter. Whey accordingly contains butter, in so far as the 
cream has not been separated, and butter, therefore, may be 
derived from whey. It contains likewise the sugar of milk, 
which may be obtained separately, in the erystalline form, 
by evaporation ; and, in certain parts of Europe, the sugar 


A Sl 


ill 
ae 
i 
yy) 
li 


ati ater, 


f 


278 THE OX. 


of milk is prepared on the large scale, and forms the subject 
of commerce. Whey is sometimes used as human food, but 
more generally for feeding the animals of the farm. It 
quickly becomes acid, and yields vinegar ; it passes likewise 
through the vinous fermentation, in which state it has an in- 
toxicating effect. 

Cheese, as formed by the common methods, is a mixture of 
the caseous with the oily matter of milk, to which it owes its 
richness. When the cream, therefore, is separated from the 
milk before coagulation, the cheese contains less of oil, and _ 
is of inferior estimation. When newly made, cheese is soft, 
gelatinous, and mild, but after a time it undergoes a chemi- 
cal change, and becomes strong-scented and stimulating. It 
produces certain fungi, termed mould, and becomes the abode 
of innumerable larvee, derived from the eggs of two insects, 
the one a species of bug, the other a kind of fly. It is when 
in a state of decomposition, and inhabited by these disgust- 
ing creatures, that it is the most valued as a stimulant to 
the appetite. 

Milk then, it is seen, may be separated by easy means into 
four parts: 1s¢, into Butter, which is obtained by simple 
agitation, either of the entire milk, or of the cream Separated 
from the milk; 2d, into Buttermilk, which is obtained by 
separating the butter ; 3d, into Cheese, which is produced by 
coagulation either of the whole milk, or of the milk after se- 
paration of the cream; and, 4th, into the liquid residue, or 
Whey. The means of obtaining these several products are 
so easy, that it is not surprising that they should have been 
known from the earliest times, and practised by the rudest 
people. In the more advanced stages of rural economy, the 
art of the dairy is reduced to principles, and merits the highest 
attention as a branch of public industry and domestic economy. 

The Cow goes with young about nine months, but with 


great inequality of time beyond this period, dependent on 


temperament, food, and treatment. The lacteal secretion is 
observed previous to the birth, but only takes place in quan- 


THE DAIRY. 279 


tity when the young is born, though in a few rare instances, 
heifers, without contact with the male, have been known to 
produce milk; and the same curious anomaly has been ob- 
served in the case of young mares. Fora few days after the 
birth, the milk, then termed Colostrum, is viscid, and of a 
deep yellow colour, and tends more readily than other milk 
to undergo decomposition, and yields butter with difficulty. 
The eclostrum should not, therefore, be mixed with the other 
milk of the dairy, but be given to the new-born calf. The 
milk, in a few days after the birth, assumes its usual proper- 
ties, and for about ninety days is yielded abundantly, and 
with an increase of richness in cream. The produce after a 
time continues to diminish, and in about forty days before 
the birth, the milk becomes alkaline and incapable of coagu- 
lation, and ceases to be saccharine. The further milking of 
the animal should then cease. Cows are usually milked twice 
in the day throughout the year, in the morning and evening, 
but they may be milked three times in the day when very full 
in milk. The operation should be performed with gentleness 
and care, and the milk withdrawn to the last portion. The 
first drawn milk is always comparatively serous, while every 
succeeding quantity improves in richness and abundance of 
cream, so that the last portion contains many times the pro- 
portion of cream contained in the first. . 
The domestic dairy is directed indifferently to the procur- 
ing of milk for food, to the preparation of butter, and some- 
times to the production of cheese. But the larger dairies 
designed for the sale of milk and its products, are devoted 
more exclusively to one or other of these productions. The 
first class of dairies consists of those directed to the disposal 
of milk in the fresh state as human food. Of this kind gene- 
rally are the dairies in and around towns. These are the 
dairies in which the largest return is obtained from the pro- 
duce of the Cow. The second class consists of those in which 
the milk is chiefly employed for the production of butter to 
be disposed of in the fresh state. These are the next in pro- 
fitable return to those in which the milk itself is disposed of ; 


a NC tees nt moe eee, 
Ry «prt tier ibe Kb ay ee 7 ‘ . 


280 THE OX. 


_ and they are generally limited to the vicinity of the markets 
of consumption, or to places having easy access to them. 
Where the market is remote, or the access to it difficult, the 
butter, in place of being used in the fresh state, is salted for 
preservation. The third kind of dairy is chiefly employed in 

- the preparation of cheese; but, for the most part, in the prac- 
tice of the dairy, the manufacture of cheese is combined with 
the preparation of butter to be disposed of in the salted state. 
The interests and habits of the dairyman will lead him to the 
kind of dairy which he shall establish. If he is in the vicinity 
of a town, he will generally adopt that which is to supply the 
inhabitants with milk in the natural state. In this kind of 
dairy the rule of practice is, that the milk shall be conveyed 


to the consumer before the cream has separated from the 
liquid, and before acidity has taken place by the formation 
of acids. To prevent ascescence and the separation of the 
lighter parts, it should be kept at the greatest possible degree 
of cold. The ascescence and coagulation of the milk, too, 
may be retarded or prevented by the addition of an alkaline 
carbonate, of which the most suitable is carbonate of soda. 
The crystallized salt, being dissolved in two or three times 
its weight of cold water, is to be mixed with the milk, until 
a slip of turmeric paper, dipped into the fluid, retains its 
yellow colour, or rather just begins to change its yellow 
colour to brown. And even when milk has become acid 
and curdled, it may have its properties restored by this 
mean, Milk, too, may be preserved by heating it when taken 
from the Cow, and once a-day afterwards. When milk is 
evaporated to dryness, the residuum, in the form of a powder, 
may be preserved in close bottles; and when required for 


13 3 
abe 
wa. 
ba i 
1H 
: 
aie 
ae: 
rh 
p 
i 
4 
i 
ifs 
a 
clr 
‘aoe 
paad 
eal 
, 
4 ; 


oo ca om aga 


use, mixed with water, to be formed into an emulsion, which 
is not very different in its flavour and qualities from the ori- 
ginal milk; and in this manner the substance of milk may 
be preserved for the longest sea-voyages and distant jour- 
neys. The trade in milk in large towns has given rise to a 
system of adulteration which ought to be punished as a fraud 
upon the consumer, The primary adulteration is dilution by 


STS - = 


THE DAIRY. : 281 


water, which is known to be practised to a great extent in 
some of the capitals of Europe, and chiefly in London and 
Paris. The. effect is not confined to an impairing of the 
nutritive properties of the milk: it leads to other devices, 


still more criminal, for the purpose of concealing the adul- _ 
 teration. ; 


The next destination of the dairy is the production of | 


Butter. The preparation of butter is a simple process, capable 
of being performed on the large scale, as well as on the small 
by the domestic inmates of the household. It may be ob- 
tained either by separating the cream from the milk and 
churning it, or by churning the cream and milk together. By 
churning the cream alone, butter will be obtained of better 
flavour and more valued for domestic use; by churning the 
milk without separation of the cream, butter will be obtained 
in larger quantity, and, though not usually so delicate in its 
fresh state, equally suited for being salted. 


When butter is to be prepared by churning the cream alone, 


the following is the method adopted. The Cows being milked, 
the milk is carried home to the dairy in pails or larger vessels, 
into which the smaller ones have been emptied, with the least 
possible delay or agitation of the milk. For which reasons, 
as well as in-order to economize the time of the milkers, the 
cows to be milked may be driven quietly home to the vici- 
nity of the dairy. The milk is passed through a hair-sieve 
into the vessels in which it is toremain. These vessels may 
either consist of shallow troughs formed of marble or slate, 
of a size to contain the milk of several cows, and having an 
aperture with a stopcock at bottom; or of shallow circular 
yessels capable of containing from half a gallon to a gallon. 
The latter are made of wood, but better of unglazed earthen- 
ware; and, with still greater advantage, of zine, or of cast- 
iron softened by annealing, turned smooth inside, and coated 
with tin. Whichever class of coolers is employed, the milk 
is emptied into them to the depth of from four to six inches, 
and the liquid is left at rest in the milk-room. In twenty- 


Se . ° Hi i : vane aces HN a 
ORE ELIOT AEN EIEIO nn i Sie acacereriner aan ON NT ere > a i Aaerentea . 


aa neeiimencshchelileliad 


282 THE OX. 


four hours, the greater part of the cream will have risen to 
the surface ; but a larger quantity will be obtained if the 
milk is allowed to stand for a longer time. Sometimes, in 
very cold weather, it is permitted to’ stand for forty-eight 
hours ; but twenty-four will suffice for obtaining all the more 
valuable part of the cream. When the larger troughs are 
used, the stop-cock is turned, and the serous milk is with- 
drawn from beneath the cream; and then the cream is in 
like manner withdrawn into a Separate vessel; and in the 
‘ease of the smaller coolers, the cream is skimmed off, which 
may be done by a flat perforated dish of tin. Sometimes re- 
peated skimmings of the cream take place, and sometimes 
its separation is favoured by the application of heat. The 
apartment for containing the milk, commonly termed the 
milk-room, should be well protected from the effect of the 
sun’s rays, and formed so as to admit of easy ventilation. 
It should, if possible, be arched with brick or stone, have a 
northern exposure, and be distant from standing ponds of 
water and putrid effluvia. 

The cream being removed, is put into a vessel, frequently 
a barrel, but better a jar of unglazed earthenware, or vase 
of marble. Fresh portions of cream, from successive milk- 
ings of the cows, are added, until a sufficient quantity is eol- | 
lected for churning. It may remain a week, but it is better 
that the period should not exceed four or five days. In this 
state the whole cream becomes acid and coagulates, which 
favours the separation of the butter ; and in order to produce 
coagulation, the acid juice of lemon may be added. When 
the necessary quantity of cream has been collected, it is put 
into the churn. 

Churns are of various kinds. The most common is the 
Plunge-churn, as it is called, moved by the hand. It consists 
of a cylindrical vessel of wood placed upright. The agitation 
is given to the milk by a perforated board, which nearly fits 
the cylinder, and to which is attached a long handle. This 
being moved up and down, the milk is agitated, and the butter, 


THE DAIRY. 283. 


after a time, is separated. The other kind of churn, termed 
the Barrel-churn, consists of a cylindrical vessel of wood, 
placed horizontally, through which an axle passes having 
sparred arms or wings, which are fixed to it within the cylin- 
der. A handle is attached, and either the churn is moved 
round, or the axle with its arms is moved, the churn remain- 
ing stationary. Of the two kinds described, the best is the 


plunge-churn, which may either be moved by the hand, or be 


on the larger scale, and driven by machinery. 

The best temperature for churning is about 56° of Fahren- 
heit, the heat of.the milk rising 4° by the action of churning; 
and in the warmer season of summer, the most suitable time 
for performing the operation is in the cool of the morning. 
In winter, when the weather is cold, the temperature of the 
milk should be raised to 60° or more, by the addition of warm 
water. ‘The time required for churning by the hand varies 
from about an hour and a quarter to two hours ; and in win- 
ter to three hours. The process should be begun gently, so 
as to break the coagulum, and then continued equally and 
without intermission. 

The butter being formed, is collected = removed from 
the churn. It is then worked to and fro on a board, or 
smooth slab, so as to express the serum, dried with a cloth, 
or moderately washed with water. The operation of knead- 
ing may be performed by the hand, but it is better done by 
wooden spatulz, the contact of the hand injuring the butter. 
When the butter is not designed for immediate use, the pres- 
sure and washing should be so performed as that all the 
serum shall be separated, any portion of it remaining caus- 
ing the butter to spoil in a short time. When the butter is 
intended for sale, it is mixed with a little pure salt, and 
formed into lumps or rolls, usually of a pound or half a pound 
each. It is kept cool, but in no case under water. When 
the butter is not designed for present consumption, it is 
more or less impregnated with salt, in the proportion of an 
ounce or less to the pound. The salt being worked into the 


— 
eS 


a 


er tain 


erties; 


ceeds 


ON et mension 


ee 
- RRR eA ea ISS 


Leerstinsticsenaenensttiate ees 
RES Nie ab acini eae na a 
sw a ER seen > 
Oras TY eg Fe ; 
S ie GENT. z 


PS ARTO WE NEON Ea cE = 


| 
| : 


Eocmaanshenntnonatmenieecnie 
“ 


a a ea Sa a 
- —- — 


284 THE OX. 


butter, the latter is put in Jars or casks. The casks should 
be of lime-tree, or other hard wood, carefully seasoned by 
being boiled for several hours before being formed into casks, 
and afterwards by being exposed to the air, and well soaked 
in cold water or brine previous to use. The cask being rub- 
bed in the inside with salt, the butter is pressed into it, and 
in seven or eight days a quantity of melted butter, or a satu- 
rated solution of salt and water, may be poured in to fill up 
any vacuity between the butter and the wood ;.and the whole 
being then covered with a layer of salt, the top of the vessel 
is put on. With the salt employed in curing may be mixed 
@ proportion of purified nitrate of potash, and sometimes a 
quantity of sugar, which preserves the butter without com- 
municating a saline taste. 

The other method practised consists in churning the milk 
and cream together. In this case the milk, as it is brought 
from the cows, is put into the cooling vessels, as before, in 
order that it may cool down quickly to the temperature of 
the milk-house. When this has taken place, or even with- 
out the preliminary cooling, the whole milk is emptied into 
a barrel, where it remains until it becomes acid and coagu- 
lates. This will take place in a week or less, according to 
the temperature of the air. It is then put into the churn, 
and gently churned for a few Seconds, so as to break the 
coagulum, and mix its parts; and then a little hot water is 
added, so as to raise the temperature to 70° or 75°. The addi- 
tion of hot water is not necessary, but it saves labour by 
causing the butter to separate more readily. The process of 
churning is more laborious than when the cream alone is 
used ; and therefore machinery should be employed to move 
the churn. In the larger dairies the churn may be made to 


_ contain sixty or seventy gallons or more, and this quantity 


of milk may, by means of a small Pony or slight water-power, 
be churned in an hour and a half. . 

When the cream alone has been used in churning, the re- 
siduum, after removal of the cream, is Skimmilk. This sub- 


THE DAIRY. 285 


stance still retains the caseous matter of the milk, and may, 
therefore, be employed for the making of cheese. But it is 
not so well suited for this purpose as the entire milk, because 
the cream, which adds to the richness of the cheese, has been 
mostly withdrawn. It may be used for human food, and is 
perfectly nutritious, containing both the cheesy matter and 
sugar of milk. Over a large part of England it is chiefly 
employed for the feeding of Hogs, which is a great misappli- 
cation of a substance fitted for human aliment, and practised 
in no other country in Europe. | 

When the milk and cream are churned together, the dairy 
affords no skimmilk. But in place of it there is the butter- 
milk, which is a greatly more nutritive substance than that 
which is obtained when the cream alone is churned. It is 
merely, in truth, the milk deprived of its butter. It is sub- 
acid and cooling, and is used for food in some of the western 
— counties of England, largely throughout the west of Scotland, 
and all over Ireland. It may be coagulated, and cheese pre- 
pared from it; but the cheese of buttermilk is of little esti- 
mation. When buttermilk is kept, it partially undergoes the 
alcoholic fermentation, and becomes intoxicating. 

The consumption of butter in the British Islands is prodi- 
giously great. It is used by all classes in the solid form as 


a grateful food ; and is applied to the same purposes of house- 


hold economy for which oil is used in the countries of the 
olive. Notwithstanding the vast internal production, a large 
importation takes place from other countries, chiefly from 
Germany and Holland. The principal district of the butter 
dairy in England is the southern and south-eastern counties. 
Butter is brought to London in the fresh state from the dis- 
tant provinces ; and even when salted, it is the practice of 
the dealers to wash out the salt, and sell the butter to the 
inhabitants as fresh. 

The other product of the dairy is Cheese, which may either 
be produced by curdling the entire milk, or by separating the 
cream and coagulating the milk alone. The first process is 


286 THE OX, 


the preparation of the coagulating medium termed runnet or 


rennet, which is most conveniently derived from the gastric 
juice contained in the abomasum, or fourth stomach, of a 
sucking calf. When the animal is just killed, this organ 
with the coagulated milk and chyme which it contains, is 
taken out to be preserved by salting and drying in the man- 
ner of bacon. When required for use, it is cut into small 
pieces, and macerated in water for a few days, and the liquor, 
which is Runnet, is preserved in bottles. Prepared stomachs 
of the calf form the subject of commerce. They are imported 
from Ireland under the name of, Vells; but every dairyman 
should prepare them for himself, as in this way only he can 
be assured of the strength and goodness of his runnet. 
When a cheese is to be formed, the course of proceeding 
is determined by the quantity of milk at the command of the 
dairyman. If there is a sufficient number of cows to make 
one or more cheeses at each milking, then the milk, as it is 
brought from the cows, is strained through a hair-sieve into 
a tub or vat, and while it is yet warm the runnet is added: 
and if it shall have been too much cooled after milking, it is 
raised to the required temperature by the addition of hot 
water. The quantity of runnet used depends upon its strength, 
and this again on the method by which it has been prepared ; 
so that no precise rule exists for adapting the quantity of 
runnet to that of the milk to be acted upon. It is used in all 
quantities, from a table-spoonful or two to the third part of 
a pint, the rule of practice being to employ it in such a quan- 
tity, as shall just suffice to coagulate the milk in the Space of 
not less than an hour. Previous to the addition of the run- 
net, it is common, in the English dairies, to add some colour- 
ing matter, in order to give a red tinge to the cheese. The 
substance commonly employed is arnotto, which ig derived 
from the red pulp covering the seeds of the shrub Biza Orel- 
lana, and is imported from South America and the West 
Indian Islands in the form of red balls. It is dissolved in a 
bowl of milk by rubbing a small piece of it on a smooth stone 


THE DAIRY. 287 


kept for the purpose, which causes the milk to assume a deep 
red colour; and the milk thus coloured, is added to that to be 
curdled in the quantity required to give it a deep orange tinge. 
The dye being mixed, the runnet is added, and the whole 
being stirred, the vat is covered with a thick canvass cloth, 
so as to prevent the milk from cooling: the whole is then left 
at rest, and the coagulation proceeds to its termination. 
This is the method of proceeding, when there is a sufficient 
quantity-of milk at each milking of the cows to form one or 
more cheeses ; but when there is not a sufficient quantity of 
milk for this purpose, or when for any reason the milk of a pre- 
vious collection is mixed with the new, then the older milk is 
to be heated to the required temperature before being mixed 
with the new. This may be done by heating the old milk 


in a boiler to the temperature of about 90°, or better; by 
. putting the milk in a tin or copper can, and placing this in’ 


a cauldron of boiling water; or else by heating only such a 
portion of the milk as, when added to the remainder, shall 
raise it to the temperature sought for. The heated milk and 
the new being then mixed together, the colouring matter and 
runnet are added, the vat is covered, and the coagulation 
allowed to proceed. 

The most suitable temperature for the milk to be curdled 
is found to be about 90°. The quantity of runnet should be 
so adjusted to the liquid, as that the coagulation shall take 
place in about an hour. If the coagulation take place too 
quickly, either from an excess in the proportion of runnet, or 
too high a temperature of the milk, the curd produced is hard 
and tough, and the cheese is wanting in delicacy of texture 
and flavour; and if, on the other hand, the strength of the 
runnet, or temperature of the liquid, is too small, the curd 
does not acquire sufficient consistence. 

The curd being formed, the whey is expressed. This is at 
first done gently, because otherwise, before the curd has 
acquired consistence, a portion of the cream would be ex- 


pressed along with the serum. The most approved practice | 


a A ee tt ate + ptt 


teed isch sepsninrrecacaein halts mn 


288 THE OX. 


is to cut the curd quickly, and in all directions, with a knife. 
A common table-knife will suffice ; but it is better that it be 
formed of several blades, at the distance of an inch from one 
another. On dividing the curd, the whey rapidly exudes and 
rises to the surface, and the curd subsides to the bottom. 
As soon as this has taken place, the whey is to be rapidly 
removed. This is done partly by pouring it off, and partly 
by baling it out with wooden bowls, although it might be 
better done by a syphon. The subdivision of the curd with 
the knife at the same time is continued, and when all the 
whey that can be separated in this manner is removed, the 
curd is taken out and placed on a long sieve, and permitted 
to drain. When the whey by these means has been drained 
to the utmost, the curd is placed on a board, or in a perforated 
vat. It is then minutely comminuted and compressed by the 
hands; and this manipulation is continued so long as any 
whey can be expressed. 

The curd is then to be subjected to the action of the cheese-. 
press, in order that it may be consolidated, and that all the 
further serous matter may be expressed. To this end it is 
pressed into the mould, which is a wooden vessel of the size 
and shape of the cheese to be made, formed generally by the 
turning-lathe out of a solid block of wood, and furnished with 
a thick separate top, of a size sufficient to fit the interior of 
the mould. A linen cloth, to be folded round the cheese, is 
put into the mould; and the comminuted curd is heaped into 
the cloth, which is covered over it, and the whole is put 
under the press. The curd remains in the press for an hour 
or two; when it is taken out, wrapped in a fresh cloth, and 
replaced in the press. After this it is taken out every six 
hours, or oftener, the same operations being repeated. In 


three days, or more, according to the degree of previous ma- 
nipulation, the operation will be completed. The pressure 
on the curd should have been gradually increased from about 
60 lb. to 300 1b., or more. 

The cheese has now to be removed to a warm apartment. 


3 


THE DAIRY. 289 


If it has not beeh previously salted, which may have been 
done either by salting the curd, or by rubbing the cheese 
with salt each time it was taken out of the press, it is now 
to be salted. To this end, it is to be rubbed with salt daily 
for eight or ten days. It may likewise be washed ‘once or 
twice with hot water, and finally rubbed with butter, so as _ 
to soften the external surface, and prevent its cracking. It 
is then placed in the store-room, on a shelf, where it remains — 
until disposed of. It is for a time to be turned daily, and 
the skin is to be kept clean and soft, by anointing and brush- 
ing it. The cheese apartment should be moderately cool, 
and be ventilated without admitting any current of wind. It 
should be kept exceedingly clean, and the walls and other 
parts should be frequently washed with a solution of chloride 
of lime, so as to destroy effluvia, and prevent the multiplica- 
tion of insects which deposit their eggs in the cheese. 
_ When cheese of peculiar richness is required, the prac- 
tice is to add a further quantity of cream to the milk to be 
eurdled than that which itself produces: thus the cream of 
one milking is added to the milk of the following one, which 
is made into curd. By this mean the milk for each cheese 
has not only its own cream, but that of the previous milking. 
There is waste in this practice, but the higher price of the 
cheese compensates the dairyman. In this manner are made 
the rich cheeses of Stilton, Cottenham, and Southam, usually 
termed cream-cheeses. The process is, after having milked 
_the cows in the morning, to skim off the cream of the pre- 
vious evening, and mix it with the new milk.. The runnet 
being added, the coagulation is allowed to take place in the 
usual manner, with this difference, that the temperature of 
the milk is kept somewhat lower, and the coagulation more 
slowly produced. To retain the cream, too, the whey is 
more cautiously separated, and, in place of the strong pres- 
sure of the cheese-press, the cheese is pressed with cloths 
bound round it. In the preparation of the cheese called 
Stilton, which is the most esteemed of this class, the curd, 
T 


290 THE OX, 


after being formed, is gently lifted out of the vat and placed 
on a sieve. When the whey is strained off, the curd is care- 
fully compressed by the hand till it has become dry and firm, 
and then placed in a box or mould. It is afterwards set on 
a dry board, and bound round with fillets of linen cloth, 
which are tightened as occasion requires. The ends of the 
cheese are carefully brushed, and when the cloths are re- 
moved, the sides are treated in the same manner; and this 
manipulation is continued for two or three months. Some- 
times the curd is hung upon nets, but the cheeses formed in 
this way are not so much valued as those which are made in 


moulds. 

Another class of cheeses consists of those which are made 
after a separation of the cream, usually termed skimmilk 
cheeses. They are less oily, and consequently less valued 
than the others ; but they are nearly equally nutritious, and 


are largely consumed in the recent state by the less opulent 
classes. They withstand the heat of warm climates better 
than the richer kinds, are less subject to injury from the 
larvee of insects, and are better suited, accordingly, to the 
victualling of ships. They should be made in the Same man- 
ner as the full-milk cheeses, with equal attention to the slow 
coagulation of the milk, to the careful Separation of the 
whey, and the gradual pressure on the curd, 

Cheese is produced in almost every part of the United 
Kingdom ; but its quality varies greatly in different districts, 
according to the care with which the manipulation is per- 
formed, and the skill derived from experience. The manu- 
facture is more especially carried on in the country north 
and west of the line extending from the Wash to Somerset- 
shire. The centre of the principal cheese-district of the 
south-western division of the kingdom, is the county of 
Gloucester, where the rich vales of the Severn and the Avon 
are depastured by extensive herds of dairy cows. The cheese 
of Gloucester is of two kinds, the single and the double. 
The first is made with new milk in the morning, to which 


THE DAIRY. 291 


is added the milk of the previous evening deprived of its 
cream, which is made into butter. The single Gloucester, 
therefore, contains only half the natural cream of the milk; 
yet it is so admirably made, that it excels that of other dis- 
tricts where the whole cream is consumed. The double 
Gloucester, thie greater part of which is produced in the hun- 
dred of Berkley, is made of the milk with all its natural 
cream. It is the mast generally esteemed kind of cheese 
produced in England, possessing all the richness that ought 
to be required, with a mild and grateful flavour. Although 
Gloucestershire still retains its pre-eminence, the same kind 
of cheese is produced in all the neighbouring counties. The 
Berkley cheeses are purchased by the cheese-factor about 
Michaelmas: he judges of the quality by the blue colour of 
the skin appearing through the red dye with which their 
surface is tinged: he used to walk over each cheese; if it 
yielded to the pressure of the foot, it was said to be heaved, 
and was rejected as unfit for the London market. The Vale 
of Berkley alone is computed to produce annually from a 
thousand to twelve hundred tons of these unrivalled cheeses. 

From Gloucester the manufacture of cheese, on the large 
scale, extends into Oxfordshire, and up the Avon into War- 
wickshire, which is computed to produce above twenty thou- 
sand tons annually, and into all the neighbouring districts, 
The county of Somerset likewise abounds in dairies, but ap- 
plied as much to the production of butter as of cheese. The 
marshes between Bridgewater and Cross produce a fine oily 
cheese; and that of the Vale of Cheddar has something 
of the flavour of Parmesan. In North Wiltshire, likewise, 
are many dairies. The cheese is prepared nearly in the 
same manner as that of Gloucester. It is mild and agree- 
able: the cheeses are small, and being made into fanciful 
forms, a8 pine-apples, and the like, are widely distributed in 
the towns. . 

The next great cheese-manufacturing district is Cheshire, 
which has been earlier distinguished for this production than 


eT TS aoe 
~ ; owe nas niin < ews 
eeepc. ate ee on 


ree 


——— 


— 
Sante ar eae Rawage et 


en 


asta sR a na 
a ~ 
w vr 


poecnes 


Tag aor 8 eee Ene paaR SENOS ee Se 
0 - i w 


Sed 
LS gare we pone 
San? age wae 


= Sr wat neneaencaareesaOC 7 ~ 7 adippedeer rman “ ws 
— snsaaoumeamentanireasnnmamemmenmmnmitcomommenia ion — nia ware i 
oan . ~ ay eniiieny enna as - anne = 


292 | THE OX, 


any other part of England. The cheese of Cheshire is pre- 
pared from the milk of the morning, to which is added that 
of the previous evening, with its cream, It undergoes a 
more laborious manipulation than that of Gloucester, and it is 
more largely saturated with salt. It is not only salted when 
in the state of curd, but it is rubbed externally, and steeped 
in brine. The cheeses are made very large, weighing from 
60 to 100 Ib., and more. They are not regarded as matured 
for use until they are two years old. They have a strong 
taste, which increases with age, and are altogether different 
in texture and flavour from the mild and fragrant cheeses of 
Gloucester and the adjoining districts. But they keep ad- 
mirably well, and are more largely carried to other countries 
than any of the other cheeses of England. The same kind of 
cheese is largely produced in Shropshire on the south, and 
likewise in Lancashire on the north. 

Turning to the eastern counties, the extensive district 
stretching from the Humber northward, and comprehending _ 
the counties of York, Durham, and Northumberland, neces- 
sarily yields a large quantity of milk, and all the products of 
the dairy. But this is rather a breeding and fattening than 
a dairy district ; and the cultivation of Cows for milk is sub- 
ordinate to the other purposes of the grazier. The main 
productions of the dairy are milk and butter, which, with the 
cheese produced, are chiefly, though not exclusively, destined 
for the supply of the numerous population of the country 
itself. The cheese of this part of England differs greatly ’ 
from the strong and harsh cheese of Cheshire; but it is in- 
ferior in delicacy and flavour to that of the south-western 
counties. In contact with Yorkshire to the west, is Derby- 
shire, in which numerous dairies are established. The cheese 
of Derbyshire is known in the market by its own name; the 
butter used in the same district is chiefly derived from whey. 

Crossing the Humber to the south, we enter the district 
where the richer cheeses, with an excess of cream, are pro- 
duced. They are termed Stilton, from the market-town of 


THE DAIRY. 293 


that name where they first became known. ‘They are chiefly 
produced in the county of Leicester, and especially in the 
villages round Melton Mowbray; but they are likewise manu- 
factured in the counties of Lincoln, Huntingdon, and Rut- 
land, still retaining the name of Stilton. These cheeses, 
it has been said, are formed from the morning’s milk, with 
the addition of the cream of the preceding evening. They 
are in great request, from their superior richness and agree- 
able flavour; but, from their high -price, their consumption 
is limited to the more wealthy classes, and their economical 
importance is therefore greatly inferior to that of the more 
common kinds. They are not reckoned sufficiently mellow 
for use until they are two years old, when they are in a state 
of incipient decomposition. In the county of Cambridge are 
produced the rich cheeses of Cottenham and Southam. 
‘Another kind of cheese is produced in Yorkshire, Lincoin- 
shire, and many parts of England, formed wholly of coagu- 
lated cream. This must be used in the recent state, and is 
merely the subject of household luxury. 

Seotland, although abounding in milk, is greatly inferior 
to England with respect to the production of the finer kinds 
of cheese. The cheeses of Scotland are, for the most part, 
meagre and deficient in richness, flavour, and aroma; but, 
with the progress of the dairy, this manufacture has been long 
in a state of improvement. The district of Cuningham, in 


Ayrshire, became the first distinguished for the manufacture — 


of cheese, which is known by the name of Dunlop, and has 


long been much esteemed, and is largely used in the western — 


counties of Scotland. It is mild and well tasted, but want- 
ing in the peculiar pungency which distinguishes the finer 
cheeses of England. It has, however, been continually im- 


proving with the enlarging demand, and more extended prac- | 


tice of the dairy. Similar cheese is produced in the neigh- 
pouring counties of Renfrew and Lanark. In general, the 
practice in the Scotch dairies is economical, simple, and 
efficient ; but the manual processes are less carefully executed 


294. THE OX. 


than in the practice of the superior dairies in England.  Ire- 
land is in no way distinguished for the manufacture of cheese. 
The principal destination of the dairy in that country ig 
butter and buttermilk, which better consists with the state 
-. of the poorer tenants, and the divided possessions of the 
country. 

The manufacture of skimmilk cheese is not confined to any 
part of the kingdom, but is carried on wherever the dairy is 
established. As the food of the working classes, this kind 
of cheese is deserving of much attention. But from the 
greater demand for the richer cheeses which exists in Eng- 
land, and the consequent inferiority of the price of the other 
kinds, it has happened that the manufacture of skimmilk 
cheese is often performed in a too careless and imperfect 
manner. On this account the skimmilk cheeses of England 
are inferior to what the experience of other countries shews 
they could be rendered. | 

With respect to the produce of the dairy, the ordinary 
computation is, that from 7 to 8 pints, or nearly a gallon, of 
new milk, will produce 1 Ib. of cheese. When the cream is 
removed, the residuum or skimmilk will produce in about the 
proportion of 25 per cent. less of cheese than if the cream 
had remained. Somewhat more than 2 gallons of milk, with 
its cream, will produce 1 Ib. of butter: but if the cream be 
removed and churned separately, about 3 gallons of milk will 
‘be required to yield 1 lb. of butter. The price of full-milk 
cheese may be estimated on a medium at 6d. per lb.; that of 
skimmilk cheese at from 3d. to 4d. ; that of butter at from 
10d. tols. The quantity of milk yielded by a Cow varies 
greatly with the breed, and properties of the individual. In 
the case of the smaller and inferior class of Cows, the produce 

may be from 200 to 400 gallons in the year; in the case of 
the superior class, from 500 to 1000 gallons. The quantity, 
too, varies much with the abundance and quality of the food 
supplied, so that, cwteris paribus, a Cow will yield milk nearly 
in proportion to the nutriment. she is enabled to assimilate. 


Sd 


| THE DAIRY. : 295 


The high value of the products of the dairy, and the prodigi- 
ous diversity in the faculty of individual Cows to yield milk, 
shew the great importance of extending a knowledge of the 
best modes of performing the manufacture, of cultivating a 
suitable race of Cows, and of feeding them in the best man- 
ner which the means at the command of the dairyman. will 
allow. 

The Dairy is a branch of rural industry deserving of at- 
tention in the highest degree.’ There are no other means 
known to us by which so great a quantity of animal food can 


be derived for human support from the same space of ground. 


In the British Islands the production of this kind of aliment 
is very great, and its entire value forms no inconsiderable pro- 
portion of the yearly created produce of the land. There is no 
class of persons by whom milk in one or more of its forms is — 
not used. Cheese may seem to be a mere superfiuity to those 


_ who feed largely on other animal food; yet, even amongst 


this class, the consumption, from its regularity, is consider- 
able; but amongst the far more numerous classes to whom 
cheese is a part of their customary diet, the consumption of 


_ this substance is very great. Butter is used by almost every 


family above the poorest, and to an enormous extent as a 
substitute for oil in culinary preparations. Simple milk, too, 
enters into the diet of every class; with this peculiarity, that 
it is consumed in larger quantity in the rural districts than 
in the towns. It may be difficult to make an approximate 
calculation of the quantity and value of milk consumed by 
the twenty-six millions of inhabitants of the British Islands. - 
It is perhaps a reasonable calculation, that, of twenty mil- 
lions of these, each individual consumes a pint of milk in a 
day in its different forms, which would produce 912,500,000 
gallons per annum, and at 8d. the gallon, L.30,416,666, 
pesides more than 200 millions of gallons employed in the 
rearing 4nd fattening of Calves. Great as this production is, 
it is not sufficient for the supply of the inhabitants; and an 
importation takes place both of butter and cheese, which an 


° 


296 THE OX. 


extension of the native Dairy would enable the country to 
dispense with. 

We will now review the various Breeds of British Cattle, 
whether suited for the dairy, or for being grazed and fat- 
tened. 


I—THE WHITE FOREST BREED. 


The Wild Breed, or, ag it may be termed when domesti- 
cated, the White Forest Breed, identical with the ancient 
Urus, is still preserved, it has been seen, in a few Parks, 
where ‘the animals, herding and breeding only with one an- 
_other, retain their pristine characters, N umbers, however, 
existed in the domesticated state in Wales, until late in the 
last century; but they have now, for the most part, become 
so changed in colour and habits, that they can rarely be dis- 
tinguished from the ordinary races of the country, although 
Scattered individuals are yet to be met with, as in the county 
of Pembroke, in no respect distinguishable from the Wild 
Cattle of the Parks. Between Stafford and Lichfield, too, 
cattle of this race are in considerable numbers. They are 
here destitute of-horns, in which respect they resemble those 
which are kept at Ribbesdale. They are of good size, and 
are valued by the farmers as dairy cows. This race could, 
doubtless, like any other, have its usefyl properties called 
forth by the care of the breeder; but little benefit, it is con- 
ceived, would result from generally domesticating it, or re- 
sorting to it for the purpose of crossing the common varieties. 


JI—THE ZETLAND BREED. 


6 


In the Zetland Islands, races of Cattle, Sheep, and Horses, 
have existed from time immemorial, distinct in theim charac- 
ters from those which are indigenous to the Northern High- 
lands, and other parts of Scotland. These remote islands, 


THE ZETLAND BREED. 297 


the Thule of the Roman writers, were early united to the 
kingdom’ of Norway, and, in the middle ages, were in the 
hands of those lawless rovers, whose piracies extended to the 
fairer portions of Europe. The Islands were at length trans- 
ferred to the Crown of Scotland, and were for ages subjected 
to the servitude of the feudal system in its most cruel form. 
But the inhabitants, though mixed with their conquerors, 
remained essentially Norwegian ; and, even until the last 
century, the Norse language continued to be that of the op- 


pressed inhabitants. The domestic animals of the country , 
were, in like manner, distinct from those of the Celtic in- | 


: 
i 


i 


habitants of the Main, and to this day present the traces of / 


their Scandinavian descent. 


The cattle are distinctly Norwegian in their characters, : ; 


and a similar race extends to Iceland. They are small, but 
of very good form when pure, and fatten with great quick- 
ness when carried to superior pastures. Their horns are 


short, their skin is soft, and their flesh is equal to that of | 


any cattle produced in the British Islands. They are of 
various colours, generally party-coloured, and tending more 
to the lighter shades than the cattle of the Highlands. The 
females receive the male at an earlier age than is known in 


the case of any other breed in this country. The heat oc- | 
curs at the age of five or six months, and has been observed 
even at four months, indicating an early precocity of the 


animals, and a tendency to arrive soon at old age. The 


cows are tolerably good milkers, in which respect they agree - 


with the cattle of Norway, and differ from those of the High- 
lands; and in this respect too, they agree with the cattle of 
Jersey and the islands of the Channel, which are likewise 
believed to be of Norwegian origin. 7 

These cattle are smaller than those of Norway, which i is 
to be ascribed partly to the absence of shelter, and partly to 
the want of artificial food. These islands, though exposed 
to perpetual storms from the tempestuous seas that surround 
- them, have not so cold a climate as Norway ; but they are 


So Sree 


atalino = 


a NR GE a ne Wel Win oni ec | ee eee 


298 THE OX. 


totally destitute of the noble forests which, in the latter 
country, afford shelter from the icy blasts of winter, while 
the tillage of the country is every way inferior. 


Norway is a country of independent proprietors, main- 
tained, by their laws of equal Succession, in a happy medio- 
erity of condition, cultivating their paternal fields, and reap- 
ing the direct reward of their individual industry. In the 
Islands of Zetland, the cultivators of the soil are mostly . 
miserable tenants, who labour for -others, and have neither 
the means nor the will to call forth the resources of their 
country. . Hence it is, that, while the rude industry of the 
Norwegians suffices to supply their domestic animals with 
such food as the country affords, the cattle of the Zetland 
Islands are left almost in a state of nature, without sufficient 
sustenance in winter, and with scarce any other shelter than 
the desolate rocks of the country supply. Thus they remain 
without that development of form which sufficient food and 
careful treatment never fail to produce. Like the Sheep of 
the same country, they eat the fuci and other alge of the 
coasts, and wait the ebbing of the tide, that they may pro- 
cure this species of food. 

The cattle of Zetland have necessarily become much mixed 
with those of Orkney, and the latter again with those of 
Caithness and the Northern Highlands. These mixed races 
are rarely equal to those of pure descent. The crossing, too, 
has never been pursued on fixed principles, and hence the mo- 
dern cattle of Zetland are far inferior to what they might 
have been rendered by cultivating with care the parent stock, 
But, above all things, the starving of the animals while young, 
has contributed to render them puny and degenerate, as com- 
pared with the ancient Scandinavian stock. It is pleasing, 
however, to record, that the seeds of improvement are scat- 
tered in these islands, and that the attention of intelligent 
gentlemen is now directed to the improvement of the country, 
aided by the increased intercourse which steam navigation 
has opened up with the markets of the south. This latter 


THE ZETLAND BREED. — - 299 


circumstance may be expected to increase the profits of the 
producers of cattle, and enable them gradually to extend 
their supplies, of artificial food. 

A question of economical importance is, the manner in 
which the existing race of Zetland can be improved. The 


first means, certainly, are a better system of feeding and 


general treatment, applied to the animals when young. The 
- next mode is the introduction of suitable males for breeding. 
These might be obtained from the West Highlands, but the 
end would probably be still more effectually attained by re- 
sorting to Norway, where excellent bulls of the parent stock 
can be obtained with facility. | 
It is remarkable, that the little cattle of these islands 
form admirable first crosses with superior breeds, as the 
Short-horned ; but this system of crossing, though it may be 


more profitable to individual breeders, can do nothing for the _ 


general improvement of the stock of the country itself. The 
animals reared must be of a kind suited to the conditions in 
which they are placed. They must be small, hardy, and 
adapted to the state of agriculture which circumstances 
allow to be pursued. 

The same general remarks will apply to the cattle of the 
Orkney Islands. These likewise present the traces of their 
Scandinavian descent, but they are greatly more mixed_with 
the races of the Main. In particular, many bulls of coarse 


form have been introduced from Caithness, itself possessing a 


mixed breed, and thus herds, without definite characters, are 
everywhere produced. 


In every considerable tract of country, it may be observed, |. 


many advantages result from possessing a well defined breed. 
‘In this case, the breeder has merely to select for propagation 


the best animals of the race. He has the assurance that the _ 
progeny will possess the general characters which he wishes || 
to communicate. But when there is no distinct breed, in the \ 


ordinary sense of the term, his expectations will be con- 
tinually subject to disappointment, by the progeny present- 


OE a ee re ee ding beeen ye 
7 ‘ 


300 THE OX, 


ing characters different from those of the parents. An effect 
of the same kind is seen every day in the case of Dogs. If 
we breed solely from Greyhounds, Terriers, or Sheep-dogs, 
we calculate securely on obtaining those varieties respec- 
tively, with more or less of the virtues of the parents ; but if 
we produce a mixed race, we can predicate nothing certainly 
regarding the form and qualities of the mongrel progeny. 


IlI__THE WEST HIGHLAND BREED. 


The great Primary district of Scotland, usually termed the 
Highlands, has been occupied, beyond the records of history 
and tradition, by numerous herds of cattle, which have ae- 
quired the characters suited to a country of heaths and high 
mountains. These cattle, although varying in size and 
aspect with the nature and altitude of the country, present, 
with few exceptions, such characters in common, as to entitle 


| . us to refer them to a common origin. In the Zetland and 


Orkney Islands, there has existed the peculiar race which 
has been described; but in all the Highlands, properly so 
called, the herds of cattle, however distant in their habitat, 
constitute a group, connected by affinities which form a breed 
in the usual sense of the term. They are small in size ; have 
horns in the male and female, turning more or less upwards 
at the points; have short muscular limbs, and are largely 
covered with hair. Their muzzle is usually black ; they have 
dewlaps, and on the neck a ridge of coarger hair, forming a 
mane. Their colour is various, often black, sometimes brown, 
or a mixture of brown or black, and often mouse-dun. They 
are hardy beyond all the races of the cattle reared in the 
British Islands. Their size bears a constant relation to the 
supplies of natural food. In the Northern and Central High- 
lands, it often does not exceed that of the calves of a few 
months old of the larger breeds. Towards Argyleshire, on . 
the south-west, including several of the Hebrides, where the 


THE WEST HIGHLAND BREED. . 301 


production of the grasses and other herbaceous plants is more 
abundant, the size of the animals becomes in a corresponding 
degree enlarged. In like manner, towards the eastern coast, 


where tlie mountains pass into the lower country, the cattle . 


gradually assume a character approaching that of the larger 
breeds. . 


All analogy leads us to infer, that the Mountain Breeds of || 


Scotland are identical with those which formerly inhabited 
the woods of that country, which, we have seen, were the 
ancient Uri, and which we may term the White Forest Breed. 
The physical circumstances of Scotland, however, have vastly 
changed even within the historical era. Like Norway and 
other countries of the north of Europe, it was once covered 
with great forests, nearly all of which have disappeared, 
leaving the country destitute of shelter, and covered with 
heaths and the plants peculiar to peat. Under such circum- 
stances, we must expect a corresponding distinction between 
the ancient cattle of the forests, and those which have for 


ages inhabited, in a state of semi-domestication, the bleak 


mountains of the country. The main difference consists in 
habits, the one class natural to a state of liberty, and the 


other of dependence ; yet this difference disappears when the 


animals are placed under similar circumstances. The Wild 


Breed becomes domesticated with the utmost facility ; and ° 


the tame breed, if left in a state of entire liberty, assumes 
the more striking habits of the wild,—the shyness, the swift- 
ness, the concealment by the mothers of their young, and the 
like. In some of the few remaining pine forests of the north 
of Scotland, cows which are left to stray become as wild as 


deer, and are shot in the same manner. The white colour of ‘| 
the Urus in many cases returns, so that we have almost a ( 


complete restoration of the ancient characters of the race. 
Individual cattle are sometimes met with amongst the droves 
of the Northern Highlands, resembling, even to the marking 
of the ears, the White Forest Breed of the parks. 

The finest of the native cattle of the Highlands are bred 


otagent pie sear Rip nshaoninsmatanas tae tag ann He 
eames 7 “ 


~ 


Pe ee ae ee 


oeeh “eet oon 3 nana 


. 


302 THE OX. 


in Argyleshire and the neighbouring Islands. This charac- 
ter they owe to the greater development of their forms, to 
the superior herbage of the western coasts, but in a great 

, degree, likewise, to the Superior care bestowed in breed- 
ing. After the middle of last century, Archibald Duke of 
Argyle, a worthy and patriotic individual, bestowed consi- 
derable attention in improving the cattle of the district sur- 
rounding his own seat of Inverary ; and more recently, nu- 
“merous gentlemen of the Western Highlands have devoted 
sedulous attention to the improvement of this breed. On 
these accounts, the variety of the Western Highlands is 
usually referred to as the model of the breed, just as that of 
Pembroke is regarded as the model of the Mountain Breeds 
of Wales. But the West Highland Breed has extended to 
Perthshire and other parts ; and in almost every part of the 
Highlands, are now to be found gentlemen devoting their 
attention to the improvement of this staple production of their 
country. ; 

Although it is well known to all breeders, that a certain 
class of external characters indicates a disposition to arrive 
at an early maturity of bone and muscle, and to become 
easily fat, namely, a large cylindrical body, dependent upon 
the greater curvature of the ribs, a body large with relation 
to the limbs, or, in other words, limbs short with relation 
to the body, a broad expanded chest, a skin soft to the touch 
and expansile, a relative smallness of the bones, and an ab- 
sence of coarseness in the extremities; and in certain breeds 
of the lower countries, these characters may be developed 
to a high degree; yet, in a country of mountains and heaths, 
with a cold, humid, ungenial climate, there must be com- 
bined with these a set of characters indicative of that hardi- 
ness of constitution, without which the animals would be un- 
suited to the condition in which they are placed. That ex- 
treme delicacy of form which can be easily communicated 
by breeding, must be avoided. The hair, while it is silky, 
unctuous, and free fram harshness, should be abundant and 


THE WEST HIGHLAND BREED. 3038 


curling; the neck should be strong and muscular ; the fore- 


‘head rather broad ; and the nose, from the eyes to the muzzle, 


somewhat short; a dewlap should exist as a character of 
the breed; the eyes should be prominent and clear; the 


horns should be of good length, without approaching to 


coarseness, spreading, and tipped with black. . 
Now, in the genuine West Highlanders, we shall find such 
a combination of these characters, as to shew them to be well 
fitted to the country in which they are reared. Their limbs 
are short, though muscular, their chests wide and deep, their 
ribs well arched, and their backs as straight as in any other 
breed. The neck, indeed, and dewlap, seem somewhat coarse 
in the bull, but these are characters indicative of their moun- 
tain state ; and almost all their other points are what breeders 
would term good. They are of various colours. A disposi- 
tion exists in the breeders of the Highlands to cultivate the 
black colour, as conceiving it to be more indicative of hardi- 
ness; and hence the greater number of the cattle of the High- 
lands are black. But the brown colour, or the mixed black 


and brown, or the mouse-dun, are yet more generally indica- — 


tive of a disposition to fatten. The brown is attended with 
that orange tone of the skin which is valued in other breeds, 
as the Pembroke and the Devon; and there is a constant ten- 
dency in the best bred cattle of the Highlands to assume it. 
The breeders, therefore, should look to the essential charac- 
ters of form, without limiting themselves to a black colour 
of the hair, which is a property altogether secondary. 

The Cows of this breed, like those of many alpine districts, 
are deficient in the power of yielding milk. The milk they 
give is rich in cream, but it is in small quantity; and they 
very quickly tend to run dry. They are usually allowed to 
suckle their own young, and often manifest the wildness of 
their race, by refusing to yield milk, and quickly running 
dry, unless their young be suffered to suck them. 

Attempts have been sometimes made to cross this breed 
with the cattle of the lower country, with the Ayrshire, and 


2 


onan Mees 


te a 


PHOS ete 


304 . THE OX. 


even with the Short-horns. Fine animals are produced by 
first crosses of this kind ; and many of the fat oxen sent to 
be exhibited at cattle-shows are thus obtained. But the 
benefit may be said to end with the first cross: the future 
progeny is inferior to either of the parent races ; to the larger 
cattle of the plains in their peculiar characters, and to the 
mountain breed in their adaptation to a steril country. 
ivery consideration, therefore, founded on our knowledge of 
the character of the animals, and the nature of their country, 
indicates the propriety of maintaining the purity of the race 
of the Highlands, and calling forth its useful properties by 
careful breeding. Over all the Northern and Central High- 
lands, a vast scope for beneficial improvement is open; and 
no easier method of effecting it presents itself, than the ob- 
taining of Bulls from those districts where circumstances 
have enabled the breeders to — them to the greatest per- 
fection of form. 


IV.._THE PEMBROKE BREED. 


The Pembroke Breed of Cattle is proper to the county of 
that name, which occupies the south-western extremity of 
the principality. But the breed extends to all the neigh- 
bouring districts, and may be said to be the type of the whole 
Mountain Breeds of Wales. It has been seen that the 
White Forest Breed, by the mere change of colour, becomes 
similar to the modern’ Pembrokes, and is indeed identical 
with them. The latter possess the distinctive horns of the 
Wild Breed, and the yellow unctuous skin which character- 
izes it. The horns are fine, tapering, turned upwards at the 
points, and tipped with black, and the yellowness of the 
skin appears as a deep orange, nearly black, on the inside of 
the ears, the mamme, and other naked parts. The skin is 
soft, and well covered with hair,—a character which always 
indicates a humid climate. The colour preferred by the 


THE PEMBROKE BREED. 3805 


breeders is black, and, in breeding, they adhere strictly to 
this colour. They regard a mixture of white as a mark of 
impurity, though it is manifest that it is not so, but a ten- 
dency to the original character of the race. The size of the - 
Pembroke Cattle is that of the larger class of the breed of 
the West Highlands of Scotland. They have naturally a 
light hind-quarter, which is a character common to other 
mountain breeds; but this is a defect which a due attention 
to breeding corrects. Their flesh is excellent, the fat being 
well mixed with the muscular parts. They produce a large 
quantity of tallow, and, on this account, are esteemed by the 
butchers; and great numbers of them are fattened in the 
rich valley of the Severn, and elsewhere, for the supply of 
the market of London. They are hardy, and subsist well on 
seanty food: they are tolerably good feeders, to use the 
technical term ; and soon assume an appearance of maturity 
and age. The females have fair milking qualities, and the 
cows are accordingly esteemed in all parts of Wales for the 
domestic dairy. The dark orange colour of the skin, ap- 
proaching to black, is deemed an important indication of the 
milking properties of the cow. 

The Pembroke has been sometimes crossed by the Devon 
and the Hereford breeds; but a just estimation of the cha- 
racters of the former, will shew the error of this species of 
intermixture. The Pembroke is truly a Mountain Breed, 
and well adapted to the situations in which it is acclimated ; 
and a mixture of foreign blood takes from its hardiness, and 
fitness for a country of mountains and scanty herbage. 

The other races of the Welsh mountains have more or less 
ofan affinity with the Pembroke, and exhibit the traces of a 
common origin; but they are most of them smaller in size, 
lighter in the hind-quarters, and otherwise of inferior form. 
Such are those of Caernarvon and Merioneth, which are 
uncultivated in a high degree. The best method of improv- 


ing these neglected breeds would be crossing with the ge- 
nuine Pembroke. 


U 


306 THE OX. 


Anglesea is a low insular tract of North Wales, about 
twenty-four miles by seventeen, separated from Caernarvon 
by a narrow strait of the sea. It produces the grasses, but 
yet is of only moderate fertility. It rears a considerable 
number of cattle, which used to be forced to swim across _ 
the Straits of Menai, until the noble iron-bridge which now 
connects the island with the main was formed. During this 
transit, the younger cattle were often carried several miles 
by the current, or drifted seaward; and yet the Roman 
cavalry swam across this strait, when, under Paulinus Sue- 
tonius, they attacked this last stronghold of British liberty 
and Druidical worship. The native cattle of this island are 
allied, in their essential characters, to the Pembroke breed, 
and manifest a common origin; but they are of larger size 
and coarser form, having acquired the characters suited to a 
lower country. The genuine Angleseas are distinguishable 
by the upright position of the horns, and the orange-yellow 
colour of the skin. This breed has been much mixed with 
Long-horns, chiefly from Ireland ; and various attempts have 
been made by individuals to improve the breed by crosses of 
different kinds. These attempts seem to have been made 
without system, perseverance, or knowledge of the charac- 
ters of the native race. They may be said to have produced 
no beneficial effect upon the cattle of the country, the best 
of which are manifestly those which approach the nearest to 
the ancient type. The main end to be aimed at in the im- 
provement of the breed of Anglesea, is to remove that coarse- 
ness of form which is characteristic of the race; and this 
could be effected by a fitting selection of individuals for 
breeding, from the best and purest of the native stock. 

Another and important breed of Wales is the Glamorgan ; 
but the improved Glamorgans are to be ranked with the 
larger oxen of the plains, rather than with those of the 
mountains. They will be treated of in the sequel, along 
with the Herefords, and other breeds of the lower country. 

The parent stock of the Mountain Breeds of Wales, it has 


THE PEMBROKE BREED. 307 


been seen, is distinguished by a tapering upright horn. As 
the mountainous country passes by gradations into the lower, 
the cattle deviate from the native type, and assume insen- 


sibly the character of what are termed Long-horns. This: 


character is indicated by the direction as well as by the length 
of the horn. It may be considered as a character connected 


with that thickness of skin which the Ox, under certain cir- . 
cumstances of feeding and treatment, tends to assume; for — 
_ the corneous system, as could be shewn, is intimately con- 
nected with the cuticular. It is the character which a very _ 
large proportion of the oxen of these Islands had acquired ; | 


and, accordingly, of the breeds of this country, the Long- 
horned, as will afterwards be seen, were the most numerous. 
They formerly extended over all the midland counties of 
England, and the plains of Ireland. It is this tendency of 
the oxen in the central parts of Wales to assume the Long- 
horned character, as well as actual intermixture with the 
breeds of the plains, that produces that mixture of races 
which is to be seen in the country. These mixed races are 
generally of coarse and defective form, and greatly inferior, 
as fattening animals, to those which approach the nearest 
to the parent stock. 


Although Wales is generally a country of mountains, in. 


which the animals reared must mainly depend on the natural 
pastures, yet it is intersected by many fertile vales, and often 
the mountains pass by degrees into the richer plains of the 
lower country. In such cases, it is not required that breed- 
ers should confine themselves to the smaller cattle of the 
mountains. They may adopt the breeds which their respec- 
tive localities enable them to maintain, as the Durham, the 
Hereford, and the superior class of Glamorgans. In this 
case, their own judgments must guide them in the selec- 
tion of the kinds of animals best suited to the nature of 
their respective farms. But, in general, the breeders of 
Wales would do well to avoid that system of indiscriminate 
crossing and changing, which prevails in so many parts of 


308 THE OX. 


the country. A true breed, it is to be observed, is never 
to be formed by casual crossing, but by long perseverance in 
breeding from similar animals, until a uniform class of cha- 
racters is acquired and rendered permanent. For this rea- 
son, it is generally better to adopt a good breed already 
formed, than to attempt to produce a new one by a mixture 
of the blood of dissimilar animals. _ 

- The Pembroke Breed is well adapted to all the moun- 
tainous parts of Wales ; and it is important that it should be 
cultivated with care. It is not necessary that the breeders 
resort to other races for its improvement. They have merely 
to apply those principles of selection, which in all other cases 
have been successful, to render the breed good with relation 
to the circumstances in which it is reared. 

The district of Castle-Martin is that from which the finest 
of the Pembrokes are at present derived. The breeders in 
this district strictly adhere to the black colour, which has 
become at length regarded as indicative of the purity of the 
breed. This colour has, indeed, no necessary connexion with 
the really useful properties of the animals ; but having be- 
come a test of the purity of the breed, both on the part of 
| the producers and consumers, it is to be believed that the 
character will, on this account, be preserved, just, as in the 
| case of the North Devons, the red colour is retained as 
\ an index of the purity of descent. The breeders of the 
“ Castle-Martins, however, have fortunately not confined their 
attention to the secondary character of colour. They have 
devoted assiduous care to the really useful characters of the 
breed. Preserving its essential characteristics, they have 
removed the too great lightness of the hinder quarters, and 
given that general symmetry of form, which experience shews 
to have an intimate connexion with the economical proper- 
ties of all animals cultivated for human food. 


THE KERRY BREED. 809 


V.—THE KERRY BREED. 


The native breeds of Irish cattle may be divided into those 
of the mountains, moors, and bogs, and those of the richer 
plains, with intermixed breeds resulting from the union of 
different races, foreign or native. The mountain breeds ap- 
proach to the characters of the ancient White Forest Breed, 


in a sufficiently near degree to indicate a common descent 


with the cattle of the mountains of Scotland and Wales, and 
the high lands of Devon. 

Of the native breeds of Ireland, one very, peculiar and 
well defined is derived from the mountainous county of Kerry, 
the most westerly land in Europe, and remarkable for the 
humidity of its climate. The Kerry cattle of the mountains 
are generally black, with a white ridge along the spine, a _ 
character agreeing with the account which older writers have 


given of the Uri of the woods of Poland. They have often . 


also a white streak upon the belly, but they are of various 
colours, as black, brown, and mixed black and white, or black 


and brown. Their horns are fine, long, and turned upward 


at the points. Their skins are soft and unctuous, and of a 
fine orange tone, which is visible about the eyes, the ears, 
and the muzzle. Their eyes are lively and bright, and, 
although their size is diminutive, their shape is good. 

These cattle are hardy, and capable of subsisting on scanty 
fare. Although stunted in size when brought from the bogs 


‘and barren pastures on which they are reared, they make a 


wonderful advance in size, even though seven years old, when 
supplied with suitable food. The fat of their beef is well 
mixed with the muscular parts, or, in technical language, 
marbled; and they fatten well in the inside, a character | 
which renders them valuable to the butcher, and distinguishes 
them in a remarkable degree from the Long-horned Breeds — 
of the lower country. 

But the peculiar value of the Kerry Breed is the adapta- 


THE OX. 


tion of the females to the purposes of the domestic dairy. In 
milking properties, the Kerry Cow, taking size into account, 
is equal or superior to any in the British Islands. It is the 
large quantity of milk yielded by an animal so small, which 
renders the Kerry Cows so generally valued by the cottagers 
and smaller tenants of Ireland. She is frequently termed 
the Poor Man’s Cow, and she merits this appellation by her 
capacity of subsisting on such fare as he has the means to 
supply. 

This fine little breed has been greatly neglected. Scarcely 
any means have been used to produce a progressive develop- 
ment of form, by supplying proper nourishment to the breed- 
ing parents and the young, and no general care has been be- 
stowed on preserving the purity of the stock. In almost 
every part of Ireland the breed has been crossed with the 
Long-horns, and a great proportion of the Cows of the country 
known under the name of Kerries, are the result of crosses 
of this kind, and so have deviated in a greater or less degree 
from the native type, and almost always for the worse. 

A few honourable exceptions, however, exist to this too 
general neglect of the mountain dairy breed of Ireland. One 
attempt had succeeded to such a degree as to form a new 
breed, which partially exists with the characters communi- 
cated to it. It has been termed the Dexter Breed. I+ was 
formed by the late Mr Dexter, agent to Maude Lord Haw- 
warden. This gentleman is said to have produced his curious 
breed by selection from the best of the mountain cattle of the 
district. He communicated to it a remarkable roundness of 
_ form and shortness of legs. The steps, however, by which 
this improvement was effected, have not been sufficiently re- 
corded, and some doubt may exist whether the original was 
the pure Kerry, or some other breed proper to the central 
_ parts of Ireland now unknown, or whether some foreign blood, 

as the Dutch, was not mixed with the native race. One 
character of the Dexter Breed is frequently observed in cer- 
tain cattle of Ireland, namely, short legs, and a small space 


THE KERRY BREED. 811 


from the knee and hock to the hoofs. This has probably 
given rise to a saying sometimes heard, of “ Tipperary beef 
down to the heels.” However the Dexter Breed has been 
formed, it still retains its name, and the roundness and depth 
of carcass which distinguished it. When any individual of 
a Kerry drove appears remarkably round and short-legged, 
it is common for the country people to call it a Dexter. 
Amongst the successful cultivators of the dairy breed of Ire- 
land ought to be mentioned the late Bishop of Killaloe. He 
sedulously endeavoured to preserve and improve a breed 
which he conceived to be so useful to the peasantry of Ire- 
land; but his example has scarcely spread amongst other 
breeders of the country. . 

The Kerry Cows afford admirable first crosses with the 
Short-horns, Herefords, and other larger breeds. Of these 
crosses, that with the Short-horns is the most general, and 
appears to be the best. The crosses are found to be well 
adapted to fattening, as well as to the dairy ; and the profit 
from this system is so immediate, that it is to be believed 
that it will be more largely resorted to than a progressive 
improvement of the parent: stock. Nevertheless, the cultiva- 
tion of the pure dairy breed of the Kerry mountains ought 
not to be neglected by individuals or public associations. 
The breed is yet the best that is reared over a large extent 
of country, from its adaptation to the existing state of agri- 
culture, and to the humid mountains and bogs in which it is 
naturalized. Were it to be reared with care in a good dis- 


trict, the form would be gradually more developed, and the — 


Kerry breed might then bear the same relation to the moun- 
tain breeds of Ireland which the Castle-Martin does to those 
of Wales, or the West Highland to those of the north of 
Scotland. 


THE OX. 


VI.—_THE ANGUS BREED. 


The country from which this breed of cattle is derived is 
the tract of Old Red Sandstone which forms the plains and 
less elevated parts of the counties of Forfar and Kincardine. 
This tract of country is of varying fertility, has long been 
enclosed, and is now extensively applied to a mixed system 
of tillage and grazing, and, in a peculiar degree, to the pro- 
duction of turnips. The breed of cattle is to be regarded as 
one of those races which are intermediate between the races 
of the mountains and those of the richer plains. The older 
breed of the district was horned, but with a tendency, it may 
be believed, to assume the hornless character. But, however 
this be, the hornless variety ultimately became the predomi-— 
nant one, and is now to be regarded as the cultivated breed 
of the district. The animals are termed by the country 
people dodded, and sometimes humbled, cattle. Attention 
seems to have been especially devoted to them as a separate 
variety soon after the American war, when the agriculture 
of this part of Scotland began a course of rapid improvement. 
During the war with France, the cultivation and improve- 
ment of them continually extended, and numbers of them 
were driven to the English markets under the name of Gal- 
loways, which they resembled in their aspect and general 
character. There has been ever since a large exportation of 
them to Yorkshire, Norfolk, Leicester, and other grazing 
counties, where they are fattened for a longer or shorter time 
according to their condition. They find their way in num- 
bers to Smithfield, and form a part of the consumption of 
the capital. 

This breed has a certain resemblance to the Galloway, and 
a mixture of blood seems to have taken place between them ; 
but the cattle are less compact in form, and longer in their 
limbs, than the true Galloways, and have not the depth of rib 
so characteristic of the latter breed. But the Angus, living 


THE ANGUS BREED. 313 


sn a less humid climate, being subjected to more artificial 
treatment, and being less exposed, accordingly, to the incle- 
mency of the weather, have a finer though not a softer skin, 
and a less rough coat of hair, than the Galloway. They are 
better treated when calves, and during the whole period of 
- their growth ; and, though less uniform and confirmed in their 
characters than the Galloways, owe more to art and careful 
culture. Finer animals have been produced, by the care of 
distinguished breeders, in Forfarshire than in Galloway, 
though those of the latter district have the advantage de- 
rived from a country of milder temperature, and more pro- 
ductive of the natural grasses. The Angus are better milkers 
than the Galloway, though the dairy does not form an object 
of especial attention in the district. . 

The Angus are of different colours, but are mostly black, 
with white marks. Many of them are brindled, as it is term- 
ed, or a mixture of black and brown with different shades. 
The Angus breeders prefer the black, without confining them- 
selves with the same rigidity as the breeders of Galloway to 
that colour. The breeders of both districts would do well 
to disregard this secondary character of colour, and look 
solely to the form and superior fattening powers of the indi- 
viduals. 

The Angus breed has recently been much extended in the 
north of Scotland, and is justly gaining preponderance over 
the native cattle of some of the districts adjoining. The coun- 
try which it inhabits, from its excellent state of cultivation, is 
suited to maintain any race of cattle, and the Short-horned 
breed has accordingly been introduced, and may be expected 
to gain on the native race. The interests of breeders them- 
selves will determine, in the several cases that may arise, 
when the preference should be given to the native, and when 
to the imported, breed. . 

An error regarding the value of the different breeds of 
cattle may be here noticed. Over a great part of this coun- 
try the fattening of cattle is not the purpose of the breeder. 


314 | THE OX. 


He rears the cattle to the age which consists with the nature 
of his farm, and then disposes of them to another class of 
traders, who fit them for ultimate consumption. Vast num- 
bers of cattle are reared in the mountainous and less fertile 
districts and farms, and then transferred to the lower coun- 
try and richer farms to be fattened for use. This Species of 
transfer is continually going on, and constitutes a great part 
of the trade in cattle in the British Islands ; and much of the 
profit of graziers and others depends on the skill with which, 
on the one hand, the purchases are made, and, on the other, 
on the manner in which the processes of grazing and fatten- 
ing are carried on. The person who purchases lean stock 
for fattening may often be better paid by the smaller cattle 
than by the larger and finer; that is, he may receive a larger 
return from the capital laid out. But it were an error on 
this account to say, that the one breed is equal or supe- 
rior to the other. The value of a breed is not determined 
by the profit which persons may obtain by purchasing, but 
by the nett produce derived from the animals from the period 
of birth to that of maturity. An Ox that, at the age of two 
years’ old, can be fattened to the weight of sixty stones and 
upwards, like those of the Short-horned breed, is regarded 
as a more valuable animal than one that would require three 
or more years to be fattened to the same weight. The Angus 
is a good breed, well adapted to the natural and acquired 
fertility of a great tract of country ; but it cannot be brought 
to the same weight of muscle, and degree of fatness, and in 
the same period of time, as the Short-horns and Herefords. 
The latter, therefore, form the more valuable breeds, in the 
sense in which the term valuable is here employed. In like 
manner, the Short-horned and Herefords are said to be supe- 
rior in value as breeds to the West Highland, though the 
latter is immeasurably superior to the others in adaptation 
to the countries in which it is naturalized, and may be equally 
a subject of profitable trade to the grazier and feeder. When 
we employ the term valuable, then, in the abstract, with re- 


ts 
a 


- MHE POLLED ABERDEENSHIRE BREED. 315 


lation to a breed, it must be understood as denoting the qua- 
lity of reaching to the greatest weight of muscle, and degree 
of fatness, in the shortest time, and with the least consump- 
tion of food, and not. the adaptation of the race to peculiar 
localities, or the profit that may be derived between the 
periods of buying and selling. These considerations kept in 
mind, may prevent some of those disputes which sometimes 
arise between persons contending for the relative superiority 
of their respective ‘breeds of animals. nba 
Sometimes the Angus breed has been crossed with the 
Short-horned, and in this way very fine animals, superior to 
the native race, have been produced: but the benefit ends in 
a great degree with the first cross ; and the subsequent pro- 
geny is inferior to the pure Short-horns in size and tendency 
to fatten, and to the indigenous stock in hardiness and adapta- 
tion to rough treatment. The safer course, therefore, to pur- 


sue, is to preserve the two breeds distinct and pure. Where | 


the condition of farms, or the wishes of breeders, induce the 
adoption of the Short-horned breed, this ought to be cul- 
tivated in its state of purity; where other circumstances 
exist, the native breed should be preserved unmixed, care 
being used to call forth its useful properties by proper feed- 
ing, and due attention to the selection of the breeding parents. 


VIL—THE POLLED ABERDEENSHIRE BREED. 


The county of Aberdeen, covering nearly a sixteenth part 
of the entire surface of North Britain, produces numerous 
cattle which have long been a staple production of the dis- 
trict, for the consumption of the towns, and for exportation 
to the markets of the south. This extensive county consists 
essentially of gneiss and granite, but presents great diversity 
of surface, from the lofty mountains of the south-west and 
west, some of whose summits rise nearly to the region of 
perpetual congelation, to the sheltered valleys of the rivers, 


316 THE OX. 


and the lower grounds of the coasts. But, generally, the 
county of Aberdeen may be described as being rocky, barren 
of soil in most parts, and interspersed with great tracts of 
peat, covering the site of those noble forests which once over- 
spread this part of Scotland. The cattle vary with place, 
and the natural or acquired fertility of the parts where they 
have been naturalized. In the higher and wilder districts 
inland, they are identical with those of the Central High- 
lands ; and even in the lower country, where a mixture of 
blood has taken place, their characters evince that the parent 
stock has been that of the Highland mountains. But in the 
cultivated country, they have become enlarged in size with 
the progress of cultivation, and altered in their characters 
by the admixture of other races. Up to a late period in the 
last century, all the principal labours of tillage in this part of 
Scotland were performed by oxen, which caused the farmers 
to cultivate size and strength as a property of their cattle, 
and to resort to the richer districts southward for larger ani- 
mals than their own district produced, and especially to the 
eastern part of Fifeshire, where the Falkland breed wag 
reared. Although the cattle of the lower parts of Aberdeen- 
shire became, from these causes, enlarged in size, they long 
remained of bad form, having thick skins, long horns, and 
coarse extremities. With the progress of improvement, how- 
ever, during the present century, a variety has been culti- 
vated and widely extended, now generally termed the Polled 
Aberdeenshire Breed, in which the absence of horns may be 
ascribed in part to the introduction of the hornless cattle of 
other districts, but mainly to the breeding from animals of 
the native stock which possessed this peculiarity, in prefer- 
ence to those having the long horns characteristic of the 
older race. This modern variety, however, scarcely even yet 
presents that uniformity of characters which constitutes a 
true breed, although it is continually approaching to this 
condition, in consequence of increased attention to breeding, 
and more extended intercourse between the different parts of 


THE GALLOWAY BREED. 317 


the country. The individuals are of better form than the 
older race, and generally of larger size, weighing upon a me- 
dium when fat, at the age of four years, from forty-seven to 
sixty stones English. They are rarely fattened at an earlier 
age than four years, when they are valued by the butchers 
for the manner in which they cut up, and the comparative 
absence of coarser parts. Although improved, and conti- 
nually improving, they are yet, with respect to form, and 
tendency to fatten at an early age, greatly short of the per- 
fection to which they are capable of being brought. 

Into this district, as into most others where artificial food 
can be raised in sufficient quantity, the Short-horned breed 
has been introduced. It is cultivated by several breeders in 
the pure state ; but more generally it is made to cross the 
native stock, by which means a present profit is obtained. 
But, from the nature of the far greater part of the district, 
the importance will appear of carefully preserving the native 
stock, and communicating to it those properties of form which 
it is capable of receiving. 

Extending from Aberdeenshire northwards to the Pentland 
Firth, is an extensive tract of country, more or less fertile 
and improved, lying between the sea and the great moun- 
tains of the Highlands. The cattle of this extensive district 
are of mixed blood, and rarely present such uniform charac- 
ters as to allow them to be classed as true breeds. They 
have long been undergoing progressive changes, by the in- 
creased attention paid to the selection of superior animals for 
breeding, and latterly by the partial introduction of the Tees- 


water Short-horns. 


VIIL—THE GALLOWAY BREED. 


The district termed Galloway forms the termination on 
the west of the range of greywacké hills, which stretch from 


318 THB Ox. 


St Abb’s Head, on the east coast, to the North Irish Chan- 
nel. It comprehends the modern counties of Wigton and 
Kirkeudbright, but formerly included, and still does So in 
popular language, a portion of the Shires of Ayr and Dum- 
fries. The general character of the district is moist. The 
winters are more temperate than on the eastern coasts, snow 
does not remain long upon the ground, and the goj] tends to 
produce the grasses, rushes, and other herbaceous plants, 
rather than the heaths. This district has long produced 
great numbers of cattle, which have acquired a distinct class 
of characters. 

The breed of Galloway is properly one of the mountains 
rather than of the lower country, and its characters adapt it 
well to the degree of productiveness of the district, the nature 
of its agriculture, and the humidity of the climate. The 
cattle are of larger size than those of the Highlands of Scot- 
land, but smaller than the breeds of the plains. Their aye- 
rage dead weight, when fat, at three years’ old, may be 
reckoned about 45 stones, of 14 lb. to the stone: those sold 
in London at the age of nearly four, weigh from 55 to 60 
stones. The skins are thick, though soft to the touch, and 
the hair is long and soft. The predominant colour ig black, 
the breeders preferring that colour, and regarding it as in- 
dicative of hardiness and purity of blood. The form of the 
body of these cattle is compact, the limbs are short and fleshy 
to the knee and hock, the chest ig moderately deep, the throat 
is furnished with a dewlap, and the neck ig Somewhat coarse. 


—} "Then Sida Ano very long, and this character distinguishes the 


breed. The “ Galloway rib” is well known in Smithfield, 
and the general form of the animal ig valued by the butchers, 
These cattle are hardy, exceedingly docile, sufficiently good 
feeders, when carried to suitable pastures, and weigh well 
in proportion to their bulk; and they produce beef, which ig 
esteemed in the English markets, on account of the fat being 
well mixed with the muscular parts. Hector Boece, who 


ee 
eligi = 
a 


THE GALLOWAY BREED. 319 


wrote in the 16th century, speaking of the cattle of Galloway, 
says, “In this region ar mony fair ky and oxin, of quhilk the 
flesh is right delicius and tender.” 

The cows are indifferent milkers, and soon run dry. In 
this respect they resemble other mountain breeds of Scot- 
land. The character may be partly the result of breeding, 
the care of the breeders of the district having been always 
directed to the grazing, and not to the milking, properties ; 
but the milk, though comparatively small in quantity, is rich 
in cream. | 

A remarkable character of this breed is the absence of 
horns in the male and female. It is said that the older breed 
of Galloway, as it existed in the middle of last century, 
possessed horns; but this is not perfectly ascertained, and 
some earlier notices rather conduct us to the conclusion, that 
the absence of horns has been for a much longer period a 
distinctive character of the race. It may be either due to 
the physical circumstances of the country, which produce 
this constitutional character, or to the effects of selection in 
breeding, or to a combination of these causes. If the consti- 
tutional tendency existed, it was easy for breeders, by breed- 
ing only from animals destitute of horns, to render all the 
breed hornless. Sometimes, even yet, the horns are developed 
in individuals, and, as this is regarded, erroneously indeed, . 
as a test of impurity, they are cut out. In a few cases the 
development of the horns is partial: the nucleus or bony 
part is wanting, but the horny part has been formed, aa 
hangs loose on the skin. r 

The trade in cattle between Galloway and England appears 
to have begun soon after the union of the two Crowns, and 
for upwards of 150 years has been regular and extensive. 
It is computed that upwards of 20,000 head are annually 
exported from the district, of which from 16,000 to 18,000 
are sold at Smithfield ; but it is probable that the total ex- 
port exceeds the quantity mentioned. They are reared to 
the age of two or three years on the farms of the country, 


320 THE OX. 


and are driven southward, mostly in the latter part of the 
season, and chiefly to the counties of Norfolk and Suffolk. 
They are purchased by the English graziers, wintered on 
straw, hay, and green food, and fattened on the grass of the 
following season, and driven to Smithfield, supplying a large 
part of the consumption of the city from Christmas to J uly. 
They are well known, accordingly, in this great market, and 
are greatly valued by butchers and consumers. A number 
are likewise fattened in the lower parts of Dumfriesshire, 
and indeed, over a great part of that extensive county, the 
prevailing breed has hitherto been the Galloway. But for 
many years the Ayrshire breed has been. gaining ground in 
Dumfriesshire with the progress of the dairy, and in some 
cases the Short-horns have been introduced. 

In Galloway proper, the management of the cattle when 
young is rude, but suited to the character of the district. 
The calves are generally permitted to suck the dams, are 
fed on the coarse herbage of the country, left a great part of 
the winter in the fields, or kept on straw or coarse hay. The 
production of corn in the district is limited, and ig regarded 
as subordinate to the purpose of producing straw for the 
stock. The habit of trading in cattle wag very general 
amongst the farmers of Galloway, and gave rise to a Spirit of 
speculation which was somewhat unfavourable to the pursuit 
of regular agriculture. The farmers are still in the practice 
of attending markets, and making purchases and sales of 
cattle, with the view of a profit on the transfers. The great 
trade, however, is in the hands of the Norfolk and Suffolk 
drovers, who used to settle with the owners by bills, which 
was attended with hazard to the Sellers, and was sometimes 
productive of great losses to the district. The practice of 
spaying the heifers prevails to a greater extent in Galloway 
than in any part of the kingdom. The operation used to be 
performed at the age of twelve months, but is now very gene- 
rally done at two months. The greater part of those that 
are not retained for breeding are thus treated. Those heifers 

10 


THE GALLOWAY BREED. 321 


do not quite attain the size of oxen, but they are regarded 
as better suited for fattening, and their beef is reckoned 
more delicate, and brings, accordingly, a somewhat higher 


price. The practice, however, though it may be justified on — 


these grounds, is unfavourable to the improvement of the 
breed, by limiting the number of females, from which a selec- 
tion may be made for breeding. : 
Extensive as has been the trade in this staple production 
of the country, it was long before any thing like attention to 
the principles of breeding was given by the farmers. Not- 
withstanding the spirited efforts of individuals, the stock of 
the country was treated with much neglect, with relation to 
the preserving and improving of the breed. The bulls were 
almost always defective in essential points, and an injurious 
mixture had progressively taken place with cattle from Ire- 
land, 10,000 and more of which are supposed to pass every 
year through the country, by way of Donaghadee and Port- 
Patrick. Efforts have, from time to time, been made to 
cross the breed by the Dishley Long-horns, the Ayrshire, 
and the modern Short-horns. These attempts, it 1s believed, 
have been all failures, in so far as they were designed. to im- 
prove the general breed of the country ; and modern breed- 
ers, with better knowledge, have turned their attention to 
the improvement of the existing race. In this field there is 
a wide scope for the exertion of individuals, and, if steadily 
pursued, the system cannot but be attended with beneficial 
results. The breed of Galloway is peculiarly confirmed in! 
its characters, and thoroughly adapted to the condition of | 


the country ; and all that is wanted to promote its progres- | 


sive amelioration, 18 a careful selection of suitable males and 
females for breeding, with that due attention to early and 
liberal feeding of the young stock, which, in every case, 
tends to the production of superior animals. If, on any par- 
ticular farm, another race of cattle can be reared, as the 
Short-horns, let this stock be substituted; but it would be 
an error to attempt a mixture of blood with the race so 
x 


ow 


322 : THE OX. 


long acclimated, and so excellent in itself, as that of Gal- 
loway. The great advantage of having a breed possessing 
/ uniformity, is manifest in Galloway, as in every country 
where a race with determined characters exists, The breeder 
has always in such a case the assurance of being able to 
_ reproduce in the offspring the essential properties of the 
\ parents ; whereas, in countries where no uniform breed has 
been established, he never can be so assured of the result of 
coupling animals together. The cattle of Galloway, though 
they have all the characters of resemblance which constitute 
a breed, yet vary greatly in size and form, according to the 
fertility, natural or acquired, of the farms on which they are 
reared, shewing the importance of providing an increase of 
food for the animals when growing in bone and musele. One 
of the great defects, at the present time, over a large part of 
Galloway, is the not supplying the growing stock with suffi- 
cient food. 


TX.—THE POLLED SUFFOLK BREED. 


The Polled Suffolk Breed is usually termed the Suffolk | 
Dun, from the county of Suffolk, where it is found in the 
greatest numbers, and from the mouse-dun colour which was 
once the prevailing one of the breed. Although termed Suf- 
folk, the breed extends over Norfolk, Cambridge, and a part 
of Essex, where it either remains pure, or has been mixed 
in blood with other races. In Smithfield, the fattened cattle, 
whether of pure or mixed lineage, receive the name of Home- 
breds. | 

The Polled Suffolk cattle are, as the name denotes, desti- 
tute of horns. They are mostly of small size, and of defec- 
tive form, when we regard them as animals to be fattened. 
The characteristic colour of the older breed was a mouse- 
dun, or some shade approaching to that colour; but now 
they are generally reddish-brown, or brown mixed with 


—— a ee = 7 _—_ 
a a ere Se q 


* a e . 
ps tess vhemee emir ancy gm io ie ee a en gen 


THE POLLED SUFFOLK BREED. 325 


white. The general form of the unmixed race is uncouth ; 
the head is heavy, and the extremities are coarse. The belly 
is large, and the back narrow, which gave occasion to Bake- 
well to observe of them, that they were too like a penthouse- 
‘top, and would do very well if turned upside down. The 
cows have the udders very large, with the subcutaneous ab- 
dominal vein prominent,—a character which always indicates 
the power of the female to yield much milk. Nearly a cen- 
tury ago, the cows were described as having “ the carcasses 
large, the belly heavy, the back-bone ridged, the chine thin 
and hollow, and the loin narrow.” With the exception of 
the narrowness of the loin, this description applies truly to 
such of the descendants of the older breeds as remain un- 
mixed. They are found in the greatest purity and numbers 
in the middle division of the county of Suffolk, where numer- 
ous dairies are established. This may be regarded as the 
central habitation of the breed, its characters changing as 
we recede from this district. About Ipswich, and southward 
to the coast, the animals are larger, and of coarser bone, 
retaining, however, the conformation and colour distinctive 
of the breed. In Cambridge and Essex, they exhibit a greater 
or smaller degree of departure from the parent type. In 
Norfolk, they are mixed in blood with an older race, distin- 
guished by small upright horns, which has now disappeared, 
either by the substitution of the pure Suffolk, or by the effects 
of crossing. 
_ The breed was probably formed at an early period, its pe- 
culiarities having arisen from the attention of breeders being 
mainly directed to the fitness of the animals for the dairy. 
Camden thus describes the county of Suffolk between two 
and three centuries ago: “ A large country it is, and full of 
havens, of a fat and fertile soil (unlesse it be eastward), being 
compounded (as it is) of clay and marle; by meanes whereof, 
there are in every place most rich and goodly corne fields, 
with pastures as battable for grazing and feeding of cattell. 
And great store of cheeses are there made, which, to the 


- 


Re ad 


324 THE OX. , 


great commodity of the inhabitants are vented into all parts 
of England, nay into Germanie, France, and Spaine also, as 
Pantaleon, the Phisitian writeth, who stucke not to compare 
these of ours, for colour and tast both, with those of Placen- 
tia.”* And Speed, who wrote in 1676, thus speaks of the 
productions of the same part of England: “ The commodi- 
ties of this shire are many and great, whereof the chiefest 
consist in corn, cattle, cloth, pasturage, woods, sea-fish and 
fowle ; and as Abbo Floricensis hath depainted, This country 
is of green and passing fresh hue, pleasantly replenished 
with orchards, gardens, and groves: Thus he described it 
above six hundred years since, and now we find as he hath 
said; to which we may add their gain from the pail.” + 
These notices suffice to shew that it is long since a breed of 
cattle suited to the uses of the dairy had been established in 
the county of Suffolk. Some, judging from the absence of 
horns, and the size and general aspect of the animals, have 
imagined that the Polled Suffolk is a variety of the Galloway 
breed of Scotland, introduced into this part of England by 
the long intercourse between the Scotch breeders and the 
Suffolk and Norfolk graziers. The Polled Suffolk, however, 
| has as much the characteristics of a distinct native breed as 
the Galloway itself. The individuals differ from the Gallo- 
i ways in the colour of the skin and hair, in the muscular de- 
velopment of the neck and shoulders, which are naturally 
large in the Galloway, but thin in the Polled Suffolk, in the 
smaller depth of the ribs, and in the superior milking pro- 
perties of the females. 

The Polled Suffolk breed is regarded as hardy to the de- 
gree of bearing careless treatment, and subsisting on in- 
different food; and the cows are noted, as in former times, 
for the large quantity of milk which they yield, in proportion 
to their size and the food consumed. It is this property 


* Camden’s Britannia, translated newly into English by Philemon Holland, 
Doctour in Physick—1610. 
+ Speod’s Theatre of the Empire of Great Britain, 


THE POLLED SUFFOLK BREED. a20 


which gives its real value to the breed, which otherwise could 
not have maintained itself in a fertile district, amidst all the 
improvement which the cattle of the country have undergone. 
Suffolk is still distinguished as a dairy district. The prin- 
cipal manufacture is butter, which finds a sale in London, 
and other markets. It also produces great quantities of 
skimmilk cheese; which has given rise to the saying, that 
Suffolk produces the best butter and the worst cheese in 
ia England. From this kind of cheese being well suited to 
| withstand the heat of warm countries, it was formerly largely 
employed in victualling the Navy. In consequence of the 
early attention paid to the produce of the dairy, it is easy to 
see that cows the best suited for that purpose would be 
sought for, in preference to those possessing the property of 
early fattening. The dairy farmers hold it sufficient to ob- 
tain a good Milch-Cow, and, accordingly, the only principle 
, of choosing bulls is that of selecting those which possess the 
reputation of breeding a good dairy stock. This system 

being pursued for a long period, the result has been what 

our knowledge of the principles of breeding would lead us to 
expect. The characters which indicate a disposition to arrive 

at early maturity, and secrete fat, have been disregarded ; 

while those that indicate a disposition in the female to pro- 

duce abundant milk, have been alone valued. It is remarked 

. by Arthur Young, that the Suffolk breed has been preserved 
by a kind of accident. This observation cannot be admitted 

to be just. The Suffolk breeders, indeed, may not have been 

guided by very fixed principles in the choice of animals, but 

they have followed a certain rude experience, which has led 

them to select such as were suited to their uses, and they 

acquired, accordingly, a race of animals admirably adapted 

to a particular end, however defective they may be in those 

other properties, which have long been desired by the breed- 

ers of the country. The Cows of Suffolk, though subjected 

to careless treatment, and supported on the most common 

*. kinds of food, are scarcely surpassed by any other in their | 
power of yielding abundant milk. ‘| 


7. 


326 THE OX. 


It is a question of economical interest for an extensive, 
rich, and populous part of the country, whether the breed thus 
formed, during so many ages, should be preserved and improved 
on the present basis, or whether it should be abandoned for 
some other possessed of different properties? Were the pro- 
duce of the dairy the sole end of farming in Suffolk, then, 
perhaps, no better course could be followed than to preserve 
the breed as it exists, confining attention to the removing of 
its more obvious defects. But Suffolk is not merely a dairy 
county, but, like every other in England, employs a large 
capital in grazing for,the butcher ; and, therefore, it does not 
seem necessary or expedient to confine attention exclusively 
_to a race of ill-formed animals, merely because they possess 
one property in perfection. This district is capable of rear- 
ing any of the superior breeds of the Island, and others, 
therefore, might be produced in it, combining a greater num- 
ber of useful qualities than the native race. But, looking to 
the actual state of Suffolk, as a district in which the hus- 
bandry of the dairy is extensively established, and success- 
fully pursued, it is rather to be regretted, that a race of cattle 
so well suited to the uses required, should have been so much 
neglected: for it is to be observed, that the forming of a good 
dairy breed is greatly more difficult than the procuring of 
one adapted to the purposes of the grazier. But the breed 
has been long decreasing in numbers and purity, and it is . 
probable that it will ultimately be merged in races which are 
made to cross it. The Ayrshire has been introduced to a 
great extent into the district; but though the Ayrshire is 
certainly a superior race to the Suffolk, for a combination of 
useful qualities, it is greatly to be doubted if it is equal to it 
in the power of yielding a large quantity of milk on indiffer- 
ent food. 

Attempts have been made to improve the Polled Suffolk 
breed, for the purpose of rendering it suitable to the grazier 
as well as to the dairy. Mr Reeve of Weighton, near Wells, 
began a system of improvement of this kind more than fifty 
years ago. He adopted the practice of careful selection. 


apa 


THE POLLED IRISH BREED. 327 


confining himself, however, to a particular colour, which, in 
compliance with the popular opinion, was red, in place of the 
dun, more characteristic of the race. The stock acquired the 
conformation which he aimed at, and the property of arriving 
at more early maturity. His son-in-law, Mr England, pre- 
served, until a recent period, the same stock, and carefully 
cultivated the properties which it had acquired; but, not- ue 
withstanding of the perfection to which Mr Reeve’s stock : 1 
had. been brought, during a lifetime of attention, Mr England \ . 
found it for his interest to abandon it, and adopt the Short- 

horned breed, as being more profitable. This, and other ex- 
periments, lead to the conclusion, that, though the Polled . if 
Suffolk is admirably adapted to the dairy, it does not form a 
good basis for a breed suited to the mixed purposes of the 
dairyman and the grazier. : 


;  X._THE POLLED IRISH BREED. 


The Polled Irish Breed is a variety scarcely known to the 
breeders of England, but which, from its properties, deserved 
far more attention than it has received in the parts of the 
country where it had been naturalized. It has existed in 
Ireland for an unknown period, and appears to have been 
once widely diffused. It is now scattered throughout the 
country, but is only found in some numbers in the vale of | 
Shannon. The cattle are of a light brownish colour, and 1a 
destitute of horns, on which account they have been sup- iT 
posed to resemble the Suffolk Duns. But they are superior 
) in size to the Suffolk Duns, equalling, in this respect, the 

. larger class of Short-horns. The breed has been probably 
| formed by an early mixture of Dutch cattle with some of the 
native races. It has been long diminishing in numbers, in 
consequence of the immediate profit derived by a first cross 
with the improved Short-horns. From this cause, and from 
| long neglect, the Polled Irish Breed will probably, in a few 


ee eee PORN Oo A 


328 THE OX, 


years, cease to be found. Had attention been directed at an 
earlier period to its preservation, Ireland might have now 
possessed a true Dairy Breed, not Surpassed by any in the 
kingdom. 


XI._THE FALKLAND BREED. 


The peninsula of Fife, stretching into the- German Ocean, 
between the noble estuaries of the Forth and Tay, has long 
been possessed of cattle of a larger size than those of the higher 
countries, and exhibiting such points of resemblance with 
one another, as to have acquired the appellation of a Breed. 
The existing cattle of Fifeshire, however, do not really con- 
stitute a breed or family. They are rather a mixture of 
breeds, the members of which are not so amalgamated with 
one another as to present a uniform class of characters. They 
vary greatly in size, aspect, and shape. Some have horns, 
and some are destitute of horns; and, for the most part, they 
are of coarse angular forms. The prevailing colour is black, 
or black mixed with white. They are hardy, and subsist well 
on indifferent food, and the Cows are usually good milchers. 
_ Like all the races of the lower country termed home-breds, 
they are slow in arriving at maturity, but the muscular sub- 
stance is well mixed with the fatty ; and as they produce 
a good proportion of internal fat, they are valued by the 
butchers in the markets to which they are carried. ‘The 
mixture of races which exists in Fifeshire, is to be ascribed 
in part to the locality of the district, intermediate between 
the northern and southern divisions of Scotland, and in part 
to the condition of its agriculture up to a recent period. On 
the west and north-west, it lies in contact with a tract of 
country in which numbers of a kind of home-breds are rear- 
ed, and of which there has been long an influx into the richer 
parts of Fifeshire, for the purpose of being grazed. On the 
north, again, the country is only separated by the Frith of 


ca ce cr ATTN ht net ie eg ete area 


i! 
THE FALKLAND BREED. 329 an 


Tay from the breeding county of Forfar, from which numbers 
of cattle have been introduced ; and a general favour having 
existed in Fifeshire for hornless cattle, the Angus Breed has : 
been largely mixed in blood with the native stock. The do- | } 
mestic dairy, too, having been extensively cultivated by the Ny 
numerous smaller possessors of the district, Cows have been Hl 
sought for possessed of the properties of good milchers, without f 
yelation to the breed, and thus Calves of a very mixed lineage 


have been continually reared, and mingled with the other me ie! 
varieties. Further, although the county of Fife was early — it 
noted in the history of Scotland for its populousness, and the | | 
number of its towns, its rural population has not, until lately, 
been very forward to introduce modern improvements. After 1 
the glorious peace of 1763, when every branch of industry in | 

Scotland received a new impulse, Fife seemed rather to lan- 


guish. Its fisheries decayed, in consequence of the extension tt 
’ of the same branch of industry elsewhere ; its rich mines : Jd 
were not yet sufficiently called into operation, and the popu- _ 
lation of its numerous towns and hamlets shewed a tendency \ 
to decline, while a long period elapsed before its minutely- 
divided farms could be so united as to favour general im- | 
provement. By the commencement of the present century, 
— however, a great change had been effected in the condition 
} ; of this as of other parts of North Britain; but still the im- 


} provement of its cattle did not advance in a corresponding 

i degree, or rather they had been undergoing deterioration, 

j by a continued departure from the type of the only really 
| pure and valuable breed which the country produced. This ' 


breed was termed the Falkland, from the ancient royal manor 


_ of that name. 
The domain of Falkland, situated in the lower part of the | 
vale of Eden, had early merged into the possessions of the 3 | 
powerful Earls of Fife, the descendants of that illustrious 
chief who, as Macduff the Thane, has had a memorial of his 
name bequeathed to every age, by the creative genius of 
poetry. In the reign of James I., all the possessions of this e 


330 THE OX. 


ancient family were forfeited to the crown for multiplied acts 
of treason ; and from that period the manor of Falkland, with 
its noble palace, its woods, and hunting-grounds, became the 
favourite retreat of the princes of the House of Stuart. 
James IT. erected into a royal burgh the little town of Falk- 
land, because, as the preamble of the charter States, “of the 
frequent residence of the king at the manor of Falkland, and 
of the damage and inconvenience from the want of victual- 
lers, to the prelates, peers, barons, nobles, and others of the 
king’s subjects who came to the Court.” Falkland was equally 
the favourite retreat of his son J ames IIT., and of the gay 
and gallant James IV. during the few brief years accorded 
to him ere he rendered up his crown and life on the bloody 
field of Flodden. It was the early residence, likewise, of 
the accomplished James V., who, less happy than his father, 
died of a broken heart at the youthful age of thirty-one ; and, 
im more peaceful times, it became the frequent residence of 
his grandson James VI., ere he had the happy fortune to 
unite into one the long-divided realms of Scotland and Eng- 
land. It is from the domains of this ancient Seat, rendered 
memorable by the abode of so many princes, that the breed 
of Falkland cattle beyond a doubt originated. A tradition 
has been handed down, that James IV., when he married 
Margaret, the daughter of Henry VII. of England, received, 
along with the dowry of his youthful queen, a present of 300 
English Cows, which were conveyed to the park of Falkland, 
whence their descendants spread into the neighbouring coun- 
try. There is nothing inconsistent with probability in this 
tradition ; although the Falkland Breed appears to be of 
foreign origin. It resembles the Black Dairy Breed of the 
Low Countries, common in the dairies of Holland ; and, 
therefore, if brought from England, it must have been an im- 
ported race, though not the less likely, on that account, to 
have been deemed a gift worthy a royal prince. It may 
rather, however, have been brought directly from the coun- 
tries that produced it. Fifeshire, like all the rest of the east 


THE FALKLAND BREED. 331 


of Scotland, early received numerous colonies of Flemings, 
and had carried on with the opposite continent such an inter- 
course as the limited commerce of these rude times admitted. 
The Flemings and Hollanders were, even at this early period, 
known for their Cows; and it is altogether probable that some 
of these animals were brought to the royal park of Falkland, 
as something that was curious and useful. The ancient 
kings of Scotland, it is to be observed, were farmers and 
breeders of the useful animals on the great scale, nearly all 
their household revenue being derived from the produce of 
their own domains. Of this, innumerable evidences are de- 
rived from the charters and other documents of our early 
history ; and it is reasonable to believe, that, during the fre- 
quent residence of the royal household at the rural retreat 
of Falkland, cows, and the produce of the dairy, were not 


neglected. 
But however ‘the dairy breed of Falkland found its way 
cm thither, whether from England, or from the marshes of the 
| Scheldt and Rhine, it is manifest that it had been natural- 
| ized at some early period in the place where its remains are 
| yet found. Unfortunately, it has been so merged in the 
common races of the country, that individuals can now with 
. difficulty be obtained pure. It was of a black colour, marked 
a often with white, and having the skin of an orange-yellow 
fe tinge. It had short and very white horns, turned up in a 
| manner sufficient to distinguish it. Although now difficult 
| to be obtained free from mixture, its traces are everywhere 
to be found in all the home-breds of the eastern parts of 
bee Fife ; and it is probably to this intermixture that the modern 
| Fifeshire cattle owe the most useful qualities which are sup- 
posed to distinguish them. It is much to be regretted that 
the former breeders of Fifeshire should have been too care- 
less of the preservation of a breed so much superior to the 
mixed varieties that have succeeded to it. Had the Falkland 
Breed been cultivated with care, during a period when arti- 
ficial food could haye been supplied in the requisite quantity, 


3382 THE OX, 


it is probable that Fifeshire would now have been possessed 
of a breed combining, in a degree not Surpassed by any other 
in the kingdom, the properties of grazing and yielding milk. 

But the breed of Fifeshire being now, from whatever 
causes, mixed, and the Falkland Breed existing in too small 
a number to allow of any reasonable hope of restoring it, 
the economical question which arises, is, in what manner the 
existing varieties may be best improved? This certainly 
may be effected in the case of the F ifeshire, as of any other 
cattle, by a careful selection of the parents, and by a conti- 
nued system of breeding amongst the individuals of the im- 
proved progeny; but the end could not be accomplished 
without the long labour which such improvements demand, 
and hardly without a more general accordance in the opinion 
of breeders than now exists, with respect to what the Fife- 
shire breed really is, or what it should be. While one class 
of agriculturists shall cultivate a race on the model of the 
Angus or Galloway, and another, one on the type of the 
horned Falkland, particular herds and stocks may be im- 
proved, but no uniform breed can be established. It would 
Seem better, then, to recur at once to a breed already formed, 
and of recognised goodness. The improved Short-horng, or 
Durhams, have already supplanted the coarser home-breds 
over a great part of the British Islands. They have taken 
root far beyond the Forth, even in the most northern coun- 
ties; and in the high range of the Lammermuir, to the south 
of the same river, the breed is now reared in its purity by 
every farmer; and it would be absurd to contend, that a low 
country like Fife, abounding in fertile Soil, capable of pro- 
ducing turnips and the cultivated Stasses, and continually 
advancing in its agriculture, should not be able to support 
any of the finest and largest breeds which the Island can 
produce. Intelligent individuals have already introduced 
stocks of pure Short-horns, but even the merely crossing with 
superior Bulls of the breed would at once remove all the 
harsher characters of the Fifeshire varieties ; and although 


at etn nt SAO a A nt tc ir Sina EEE 


THE ALDERNEY BREED. 333 


crossing, in the case of certain breeds which have acquired a 
fixed class of characters suited to the condition of a particu- 
lar country, as the Ayrshire and the Galloway, might be in- 
judicious, it would never be found to be so with a class of 
cattle so mixed and various as that of Fifeshire. Doubtless 
the Durham Breed is not so well fitted for the ordinary pur- 
poses of the dairy as the home-breds of Fifeshire ; but then, 
in that locality, the dairy, though extensively pursued, is little 


more than an affair of the household. The main purposes of 
the grazier are grazing and fattening ; and it seems proper 
that a breed of the first class should be established in a dis- 
trict so well fitted to pursue this branch of industry. 
Extending from Fifeshire westward to the Ochil Hills, the 
cattle are generally hornless, and of a size intermediate be- 
j tween the breeds of the Highland mountains and those of 
y the plains. Some of these cattle, especially those of the 
- Qchil Hills, are really good, and suited to the country in 
which they are reared, and merely demand that attention to 
the selection of the breeding parents, which shall call forth 
their more useful properties. . | 


pn iehaginr escape Tr lid siciche yh bebe hina eo 


2 
fps -- 


XIL—THE ALDERNEY BREED. , W 


The Breed termed Alderney is derived from the group of ii 
beautiful islands, pertaining to the British Crown, which lie ee 
| near the shores of France, in the bay formed by the coasts of 
; Normandy and Britany. Although termed Alderney, the 

breed, with some difference of characters, is common to all | 

the islands. The Cows are imported into England in consi- : 14 

derable numbers, and are esteemed beyond those of any 
- other race for the richness of the milk, and the deep yellow : ; 

tinge of the butter. Hence they are in demand by the more if 

opulent classes for the domestic dairy, and regarded as a 

kind of appendage of the park and rural villa. They are in- : i 

troduced likewise into the regular butter dairies, chiefly of 


004. THE OX, 


Dorsetshire and Hampshire, and they are mingled in blood 
with the native races, especially the Devon and its varieties. 
To supply these sources of demand, the importation from the 
islands igs regular, and forms a, considerable branch of their 
commerce. | 

The cattle of this race are small and ill-formed, when 
/Ytegarded as animals to be fattened. The cow is greatly 
/ below the male in strength and stature, in which respect she 
resembles the cows of the Devon and its kindred breeds. 
’ Her neck is thin, her shoulder light, her chest narrow, and 
the belly large. The limbs are Slender, the pelvic bones 
prominent; the lumbar region is deep, the croup short and 
drooping, and the udder large. The muzzle is narrow, the 


horns are short, slender, and curving inwards. The colour 


18 usually of a light red or fawn, mixed with white ; but fre- 
quently individuals are black, mixed with white or dun, and 
sometimes cream-coloured. The skin is thin, and of a rich 
orange-yellow, and the fat, as well as the milk and butter, 
is tinged with the same colour. The animals are gentle, 
and somewhat delicate in constitution. Being small in Size, 
the milk they yield is likewise small in quantity, although 
fully in proportion to their bulk of body ; and it is viscid, and 
rich in cream. In their native country, the Bullocks are 
used for labour, to which they are better adapted than, from 
the slender form of the dam, might be inferred. 

The islands from which these cattle are derived, are the 
Sole remaining appanage to the English crown of the ancient 
Duchy of Normandy. When the rude Northmen had hewed 
& passage by the sword to the fair plaing of Western France, 
they subdued likewise the lovely little islands on its shores ; 
and, after a hundred years of strife,—having ravaged Bur- 
gundy and the adjacent provinces, and twice assailed the city 
of Paris, and once reduced it to ashes,—these wild invaders 
were put in possession of the conquered lands by a formal 
investiture. In the year of our Lord 912, Charles the Simple 
concluded a treaty, from which a thousand mighty events 


; 
=~ - 


- see 
we 


THE ALDERNEY BREED. 335 


were to spring, with Rollo, the Scandinavian chief, to whom 
was yielded up the whole of Normandy and its dependencies, 
to be held for ever as a fief of the crown of France, but in truth 
to be an independent kingdom ; for so little did the warlike 
Northman understand or regard the feudal fiction, that he 
refused to undergo the customary forms. One hundred and 
fifty years later, his great successor, surnamed the Con- 
queror, added the proud kingdom of England to his Norman 
inheritance. In the memorable course of events, the Duchy of 
Normandy was severed from the English sway; but the 
islands on its coasts were preserved, and have remained, in 
all the changes of fortune, to the present hour, a part and. 
dependency of England. The customs and language of the 
people were retained by them, and their Jaws and ancient 
privileges have been respected for the long space of 900 
years. The inhabitants have been treated by England with 
the favour which their fidelity and peculiar condition seemed 
to demand. While all the privileges of British subjects are 
accorded to them, with respect to their commerce with other 
countries, they are freed from the heavy imposts to which 
the parent country is necessarily subject. Their corn, their 


timber, their wine, their sugar, and all colonial and foreign. 


merchandize, may be imported by them free of all the cus- 
toms and restraints which, in England, must be imposed for 
the purposes of revenue and protection ; while they may ex- 
port them again, as wellas their own productions and manu- 
factures, to all the world. Although Norman in their ori- 
gin, and speaking the ancient language of the country from 
‘which they have been severed, they are English with respect 
to their interests, their religion, and their feelings as sub- 
jects. Insulting, as it were, by their contiguity, the proud 
and warlike nation which regards their country as a natural 
adjunct of France, they have bravely aided in repelling the 
attempts of repeated armaments to subdue them. But their 
true defence is the powerful navy of England, without whose 


mes 


336 THE OX, 


incessant vigilance in the time of war, nothing could guard 
them from surprise and subjugation. 

The islands are four, Alderney, Jersey, Guernsey, and Sark, 
with their dependent islets. ‘The most northerly, and nearest 
to the coast of France, is Alderney, which is well protected 
by its rocky shores and dangerous currents. The most wes- 
terly is Guernsey, which is the least fertile in soil ; and the 
smallest is Sark, which consists of a beautiful table-land, 
scarcely accessible from the sea, and capable of being de- 
fended by a handful of men. The largest, richest, and most 
populous is Jersey, lying about: six leagues from the coast of 
France. Its surface, except where it rises into rocky emi- 
nences, presents to the eye a rich forest of fruit-trees, gar- 
dens, and little cultivated fields, among which are to be seen 
the villas and chateaus of the opulent, with the lowlier, yet 
not less beautiful, dwellings of the humbler classes, green 
with vines and myrtles, and embosomed in groves of the 
cider-apple. When viewed more near, all the surface of the 
country is seen to be intersected with innumerable banks of 
earth, covered with trees, and verdant with the leaves of 
bushes and the creeping ivy. These are the divisions of the 

-numberless little fields and possessions of the inhabitants, 
into which, as an effect of the old Norman law of succession, 
enforcing an equal division of land amongst the children of 
a family, the whole country has been partitioned. The neces- 
sary effect of this law, operating for more than nine centuries 
within the narrow limits of a small island, has been to re- 

- duce all the land of the country into small possessions. 

Scarcely an estate is to be found in the whole island of forty 


" acres, many vary from five to fifteen, and the greater number 
‘fall below the extent of the least of these. The tendency 
and effect of such an institution, continued from age to age, 
might seem to be to produce an interminably minute division 
of property in land; and yet experience proves that there 
are limits to such a division, even in a tract so narrow and 


2 


ay 


THE ALDERNEY BREED. 337 


populous as Jersey. The children, in succeeding to the par- 
celled inheritance, make such arrangements with one another 
as their interests require. The younger sells to the elder, 
and he who does not wish for land to him who does; and 
thus, besides the law of mortality, which unites, from time 
to time, the scattered possessions into one, the interests of 
the possessors present a barrier to an indefinite subdivision. 
The law, founded on the simple principle, that every man is 
bound to provide equally for his children out of his stock in 
land, and that every lawful child has an equal right to the 
inheritance of his father, is cherished by these islanders as 
the most venerable of their institutions. It was derived by 


them from their Norwegian ancestors, in whose country it 


exists to the present hour; and where, after the lapse of 
more than a thousand years, it has not produced an excessive 
subdivision of estates. The land of Norway is indeed more 


divided than it would have been under the feudal system, | 


but not into smaller possessions than the interests of the in- 
heritors demand; and in no country im Europe does there 
exist a happier and more independent race of yeomanry than 
the Udal proprietors of Norway. In Jersey, and its sister 
islands, the division has been more minute, merely because 
a greater’ number of families can subsist on a given space of 


_ ground. 


All the practices of rural industry in these islands are mo- 
dified by this ancient institution. The land thus partitioned 
is cultivated in the manner of a garden, and the industry of 
the people supplies the place of that art which simplifies and 
economises labour ; and that the substitution is sufficient ap- 
pears from this, that larger returns in produce and money are 
here obtained than in the richest parts of the British Islands ; 
and in the island of Jersey, in the cases where it is let on 
lease, brings from L.4 to L.5 and upwards the acre; and 
in the neighbourhood of St Helier, the principal town, it lets 
as high as from L.8 to L.12; and at these enormous rents, it 
is to be observed, families are reared in humble affluence on 


x, 


aS Seer 


ogre 


Ee at 


338 THE OX. 


spots which elsewhere would be considered insufficient to 
maintain the poorest labourer. The people cultivate cider as 
the principal subject of export, and fruits of different kinds ; 
and in an especial manner, lucerne, clover, potatoes, carrots, 
parsnips, turnips, and cole, for the food of their cows. They 


cultivate, likewise, pease and the cereal grains, and reap 
abundant returns. Their land never lies fallow for a season, 
but is either in patches of fertile meadow, or yields continued 
crops in the manner of a garden. They manure it with the 
marine plants which grow in great abundance over all their 
rocky shores. The sea-plants thus collected, they term Vraic, 
and use either fresh or burned. They obtain their vraic as 
it is cast on shore, or they shear it from the rocks at stated 
times. The periods and the mode of gathering it are nicely 
regulated by the insular laws, so that all the people may 
equally partake of this natural gift of their seas. It forms 
their domestic fuel, and the ashes are carefully preserved 
for use. The Cow, in an especial degree, is the subject of 
the care of these island farmers. She is penned on a narrow 
space, and shifted to fresh spots of herbage several times in 
the day, and in the nights of winter she is warmly housed, 
and, when about to calve, is nourished with cider. Through- 
out all the year these little cows are to be seen in their 
patches of meadow, often under the shade of the apple-trees, 
and so fastened that they cannot raise their heads to pull 
the fruit. In addition to their herbage, they are fed with 
lucerne, clover, carrots, parsnips, and the large Jersey cole, 
the leaves of which are stripped off as they grow. A value 
is here attached to the Cow greater, perhaps, than in any 
other part of Europe. She is the resource of the household 
for food, and her surplus produce is a part of the returns of 
every farm. A Jersey man, it is said, will treat every ani- 
mal on his farm with neglect except his cow. To preserve 
the purity of the race, an act of the insular Legislature was 
passed in the year 1789, and yet subsists, by which the impor- 
tation into Jersey of any cow, heifer, calf, or bull, is prohibited 


SS ae 


THE AYRSHIRE BREED. 339 


under the penalty of 200 livres, with forfeiture of the boat 
and tackle, and a further penalty of fifty livres is imposed on 
any sailor on board who does not inform of the attempt. The 
animal itself is to be immediately slaughtered, and its flesh 
given to the poor. 

The breeds of the several islands are essentially the same, 
although that of Guernsey deviates from the common type, 
and presents a greater affinity with the races of Normandy, 
the individuals having more spreading horns, the size being 
larger, the form rounder, and the bones less prominent, than 
in the cattle of the other islands. The true Alderney has 
a great resemblance to certain breeds of Norway, which 
leads to the conclusion, that, in the intercourse with the 
North which followed the subjugation of Normandy and its 
dependencies, Scandinavian cattle were introduced into the 
Islands of the Channel. 


- XIIL—THE AYRSHIRE BREED. 


Of the cattle of these Islands, reared especially for the 
uses of the Dairy, those of but a few districts present such 
an affinity in conformation and habits as to be regarded as 
constituting breeds or families. But the cattle of Ayrshire, 


which are reared exclusively for the supply of milk, have + 
spead over a large tract of country, and, by continued inter- 
mixture with one another, have acquired such a community | 


of characters, as to form a distinct and well-defined breed. 
The county of Ayr, stretching along the estuary of the 
Clyde, and the Irish Sea, for about eighty miles, consists 
in part of moory hills, in part of an undulating surface of 
common clay, intersected by narrow vales, and in part of a 
flat tract nearer the coast, bounded towards the sea by a 
belt of barren sand. The climate is moist, but not intem- 
perate, although the country, like that of all the western 
shores of Scotland, is too much exposed to the continued winds 


SPO pn NH 


340. = THE OX. 


and humid vapours of the Atlantic. It contains fertile tracts, 
and presents to the eye picturesque scenes; but throughout 
it is only of a very moderate fertility, and exhibits a far dif- 
ferent aspect from those rich and verdant plains of the Severn 
and the Avon, of the ‘'rent and the Cam, where the largest 
cattle in Europe can be reared, and the richest productions 
of the Dairy obtained. And further, the artificial improve- 
ment of the country is but as of yesterday, when compared 
with that of the fertile plains of England. Within the 
memory almost of the living generation, the agriculture of 
Ayrshire was in a state of utter rudeness. Its condition at 
the middle of the last century, and long afterwards, is thus 
described by eye-witnesses. There was hardly, says Colonel 
Fullarton, in his Survey of Ayrshire, a practicable road in the 
country. ‘The farm-houses were mere hovels, built with clay, 
baving a fire-place in the middle, with an open space for the 
escape of the smoke, and they were placed in a dunghill. 
The lands were overrun with rushes and weeds of all kinds. 
There were no fallows, no green crops, no sown grasses, no 
carts or waggons, no straw-yards. Hardly an esculent root 
was raised, nor indeed any garden vegetables, beyond some 
Scotch greens, which, with milk and oatmeal, formed the diet 
of the people. There was little straw, and no hay beyond 
the scanty portion collected from the bogs and wastes. The 
little dung produced was dragged to the ground on cars or 
sledges, or on what were called tumbler-wheels, which turned 
with the axle-tree, and supported the wretched vehicle scarcely 
able to draw five hundredweight. The ground was scourged 
_ with successive crops of oats after oats so long as it would 
pay the seed and labour, and afford a small surplus of oat- 
meal for the subsistence of the family. It then remained in 
a state of absolute sterility, and covered with thistles, until 
rest again enabled it to produce a scanty crop of corn. The 


rent was generally paid in kind, on the condition of what was 
termed half labour. The stock and implements were fur- 
nished mutually by the parties concerned, or on such terms 


) 
| 
| 
i] 
} 
| 
‘ 


, THE AYRSHIRE BREED. S41 


as could be agreed upon, one-half of the crop going to the 
landlord as rent, and the other remaining to the tenant, to 
enable him to maintain his family and cultivate his farm. 
There being scarcely any enclosures, the horses and cattle 
were either tethered during the summer months, or intrusted 
to the discretion of the shepherd and his cur, by whom they 
were kept in continued agitation, being impelled, through 
famine, to fly from their bare leas, and commit continued de- 
predation on the adjacent crops. The cattle being starved 
during winter, were hardly able to rise without assistance in 
spring, and were never in fit condition for the market. Ne 
tenant could command money to stock his farm, and scarce 
a landlord could raise the means to improve his estate-—Such 
was the condition, not of Ayrshire alone, but of a great part 
of Scotland, during half the reign of George III., and down 
to the times which men yet living can remember. Ayrshire 
did not surpass, in the course of improvement, districts like 
itself, but rather lagged behind. Scarcely any thing that 
deserves the name of agricultural improvement was effected 
in it until after the disastrous close of the American war ; 
most of what has been done has been effected since the com- 
mencement of the present century ; and much of it within a 
few years. It is under these circumstances that a race of 
cattle has been formed and perfected, which, with relation to 
the purposes to which it is especially destined, ranks with 
some of the most useful produced in Britain. 

Authentic records are wanting to shew by what progres- 
sive steps the Dairy Breed of Ayrshire has been moulded 
into its present form. That it was late in arriving at the 
estimation in which it is now held, is sufficiently known. Mr 
Culley, who wrote his treatise on live-stock before the year 
1790, does not even mention the Ayrshire as one of the re- 
cognised breeds of the country, nor once reter to it in the subse- 
quent editions of his work ; and Colonel Fullarton, in describ- 
ing the country in which it was found, speaks of it in a man- 
ner so general, as to shew that he did not regard it as any 


342 THE OX. 


thing remarkable. The older breed of the country seems to 
have been one of those varieties of coarse cattle, with horns 
of a medium length, which formerly occupied all the central 
mountains south of the Forth, and extended into the plains. 
Mr Ayton, who published a treatise on the Dairy Husbandry 
of Ayrshire in 1825, describes them, from his own recollec- 


tion, a8 having been a puny unshapely race, not superior to 
those yet met with in many of the higher districts. They 
‘ were mostly, he tells us, of a black colour, marked with white 
on the face, the back, and the flanks, and few of the Cows 
yielded more than from one and a half to two gallons of milk 
in the day, at the height of the season, or weighed, when fat, 
more than 20 stones. But previous to the period referred 
to, cattle of other races had been mingled in blood with the 
native Ayrshire. It is stated, on competent authority, that, 
even so early as the middle of the century, the Karl of March- 
mont had brought, from his estates in Berwickshire, a bull 
and several cows which he had procured from the Bishop of 
Durham, of the Teeswater Breed, then known by the name 
of the Holstein or Dutch Breed; and mention is made of 
other proprietors who brought to their parks foreign Cows 
apparently of the same race. ‘To what degree these casual 
importations affected the native breed of Ayrshire is not cer- 
tainly known ; but tradition refers likewise to an early impor- 
tation of individuals of the Alderney Breed to the parish of 
Dunlop, which became first distinguished for its Cows and 
the produce of its dairy. This tradition is almost confirmed 
by the similarity existing between the Alderney Breed and 
the modern Ayrshire, which is so great as to lead us, inde- 
pendently of tradition, to the conclusion, that the blood of 
the one has been largely mixed with that of the other. There 
is the same peculiar character of the horns, and colour of the 
skin; and the general resemblance of the form is so great, 
that in many cases a Jersey Cow might be mistaken for an 
Ayrshire one. We may assume, then, from all the evidence 
which, in the absence of authentic documents, the case admits 


THE AYRSHIRE BREED. ~~ 343 


of, that the Dairy Breed of Ayrshire owes the characters 


which distinguish it from the older race to a mixture with 


the blood of races of the Continent, and of the Dairy Breed 
of Alderney. 

The modern Ayrshire may stand in the fourth or fifth 
class of British Breeds with respect to size. The horns are 
small, and curving inwards at the extremity after the man- 
ner of the Alderneys. The shoulders are light, and the 
loins very broad and deep, which is a conformation almost 
always accompanying the property of yielding abundant milk. 


The skin is moderately soft to the touch, and of an orange- 


yellow tinge, which appears about the eyes and on the mam- 
mex. The prevailing colour is a reddish-brown, mixed more 
orless with white. The muzzle is usually dark, though often 
it is flesh-coloured. The limbs are slender, the neck is small, 
and the head is free from coarseness. The muscles of the 
inner side of the thigh, technically called the twist, are thin ; 
and the haunch frequently droops much to the rump, @ charac- 


ter which exists likewise in the Alderney Breed, and which, | 


although it impairs the symmetry of the animal, is not re- 
garded as inconsistent with the faculty of secreting milk. 
The udders are moderately large, without being flaccid. The 
cows are very docile and gentle, and hardy to the degree of 
bearing to subsist on ordinary food. They give a large quan- 
tity of milk in proportion to their size and the meat con- 
sumed, and this milk is of excellent quality. Healthy cows, 
on good pastures, will give from 800 to 900 gallons in the 
year, although, taking into account the younger and less pro- 
ductive stock, 600 gallons may be regarded as a fair average 
for the low country, and somewhat less for a dairy-stock in 
the higher. 

Few of the steers of this breed are reared for grazing, and 
the male sucking-calves are sold to the butchers either when 
young, or when fed with milk for a longer or shorter time. 
The cows, when they become dry, fatten quickly, which is a 
property common to all good milch-cows. But the value of 


we ema arey PROTO pene 


pesheathlneanperensier mses 


344. THE OX. 


the breed is to be estimated solely by its adaptation to the 
uses of the dairy, The attention of breeders having been 
directed exclusively to this end, the animals have acquired, 
in an eminent degree, the properties Sought for; and their 
external form accords with that which indicates this faculty, 
and not with that which shews a disposition to arrive at early 
maturity of muscle and fatness. Those, therefore, who sup- 
pose that the Ayrshire Breed combines the properties of a 
dairy and grazing stock, entirely mistake its distinctive cha- 
racters. It stands in the first class as a dairy stock, but 
occupies an inferior place as one to be reared for fattening. 
The Ayrshire Breed has long been extended from its na- 
tive districts to all the neighbouring counties where the regu- 
lar dairy is established. It now forms the prevailing stock 
of Renfrew, Dumbarton, Stirling, and Lanark, and it has ex- 
tended into the shires of Dumfries, Wigton, and Kirkcud- 
bright. It has been carried into England, where, however, 
it has never arrived at the estimation which it possesses in its 
native pastures, All cows succeed best in the places where 
they have been reared, and those of Ayrshire appear to have 
the peculiarity of tending too much to fattens with a corre- 
sponding diminution of milk, when they are transported to 
richer herbage than is natural to them. They have been 
tried in the great dairy establishments of London, but have 
always been relinquished in favour of the Yorkshire and 
larger breeds. 
_ Some breeders in Ayrshire have begun to cross the breed 
with the Short-horns. This may suit the purposes of parti- 
cular breeders, because the first crosses will always be supe- 
rior to the native stock in size, form, and grazing qualities, 
and little inferior to it for the production of milk; but the 
practice cannot benefit the general breed, now so uniform in — 
its characters, and so well suited to the husbandry of the 
country. The true method of improving it is to preserve it 
in the purity which it has acquired, and to adopt such modes 
of treatment and feeding as shall conduce to the further de- 


THE DEVON BREED. 345 


velopment of its properties and form. The Ayrshire Breed — 
has been nearly doubled in weight, with a great increase in 
its power of yielding milk, within the present century ; and, 
with the further progress of cultivation, its improvement 
cannot but be progressive. 


eS Tee Oe 


POA a. 


XIV.—THE DEVON BREED. 


On the southern side of the Bristol Channel extends the 

country of the ancient Damnonii, comprehending the present 

counties of Devon and Cornwall. Much of this tract re- 
-sembles Wales in its aspect and geological characters ; and 1 

like Wales, it afforded in a former age a refuge, amongst its iq 

mountains, rocks, and fastnesses, for the Celtic Britons. In 
+- this country we find the remains of the same older breeds 
of cattle which yet exist im the Welsh mountains, modified 
by the effects of a lower altitude and more temperate climate. — 
In the county of Cornwall to the westward, the old breeds 
of cattle resembled those yet existing in the mountains of _ | 4 
Wales, although they have been long so mixed with other 
races and with one another, that it is difficult to assign to 
them any distinctive characters. But farther to the east- 
ward, and occupying the high lands of Devonshire on the 
Bristol Channel, is a peculiar variety of cattle, distinguished 
by such a common resemblance of properties and form as to - 
render it one of the best-defined breeds of the British Islands. {— 
It is usually termed the Devon Breed, and sometimes the +4 
North Devon, from its being found in the greatest purity in 
the northern division of the county. These cattle have been 
extended very widely, but their peculiar district is the north- 
ern slope of Devonshire, extending from Barnstaple eastward 
beyond the river Exe. 

The true North Devons are to be classed with the breeds 
of the higher country. They exceed a little in weight the 
hardier and more muscular Pembroke and West Highland 
cattle ; but they fall short of the Long-horned, Hereford, 


i Sr AO tiga eine 
(rs RR eR ON gma 


SR ae vy li 
Pe ee sf 5 ; ae = 


346 THE OX. 


and other varieties of the lower plains. Their general form 
is light and graceful ; their skin is of an orange-yellow colour ; 
and they are distinguished by having the hair of a bright 
red, and by their eyes being surrounded by a ring of the 
colour of the skin. The nose is likewise of the same colour, 
and the inside of the ears is orange-red. Their horns are of 
medium length, very fine, and bending upwards in the manner 
of the Wild Cattle of the parks. Their skin is unctuous and 
soft to the touch, and the hair is fine, and tending to curl, like 
that of other cattle inhabiting a humid climate. The neck 
is long, and the chest has little dewlap. The shoulders are 
oblique, the hoofs and bones of the extremities are small, the 
limbs are slender and long, the chest is only of moderate 
width, the back is long, and the distance large between the 
last asternal rib and the pelvis. These are the most marked 
characteristics of the true Devons, taking as the type of the 
breed the variety proper to the elevated district of North 
Devon. As we recede from this centre, the size and form 
of the animals deviate more or less from the pure type. In| 
the countries of richer herbage they become enlarged in size, 
and lose somewhat of the delicacy of shape which they ex- 
hibit in their native pastures. ‘They appear to be of that 
variety of the ancient cattle which were valued for their 
white colour, and the peculiarity of their red ears. 

The females of this race are small as compared with the 
bulls and oxen, deficient in the power of yielding milk, and 
\ tending to run soon dry. Nevertheless the milk is very rich 
in cream, and of a fine yellow colour, on which account many 
prefer the Devons, for the domestic dairy, to other races whose 
milk is more abundant. The flesh of the cattle is juicy and 
tender, and tolerably well mixed with the muscular parts. 
The fat has a peculiarly yellow tinge, corresponding with the 
colour of the integuments ; but this is not regarded as an 
imperfection in those markets where the principal beef is the 
Devon, and where the eye is reconciled to this peculiarity in 
the colour of the fatty tissue. 


The Devon cattle are gentle, agile, and above all our races 


F — 


ay 


THE DEVON BREED. 347 


adapted to active labour. Their shoulders have that obli- 
quity which enables them to lift freely their fore extremities ; 
and their quarters behind are relatively long, which is a cha- 
racter connected in the Ox, as in the Horse, with the power 
of active motion. Their bodies, too, are light, and their limbs 
long, muscular to the hock and knee, and below these joints 


sinewy. These cattle, then, although wanting in the power — 


of heavy draught which the larger Oxen can exert, have the 
faculty of muscular exertion in a higher degree. They trot 
well in harness, and will keep pace with a horse in the or- 
dinary labours of the farm. They are largely employed 


' throughout the county of Devon for the purposes of labour, 


usually four together, and mostly attached by the yoke and 
not by the collar. The team of the labouring Oxen in this 
beautiful county is one of the charms of the rural landscape. 
A boy accompanies the ploughman and his team to drive the 
Oxen. He chaunts continually a simple melody in low notes 
rising to the higher. From morn to night this simple song 


is heard, the ploughman putting in from time to time his — 


lower notes in happy keeping. The beasts seem cheered by 
the music ; and from hour to hour the team may be observed 
in motion, without a harsh word being uttered by the plough- 
man or his youthful companion.* 

Although the Devon Ox presents a symmetry of parts 


which pleases the eye, yet his form is not precisely that which | 


the breeder seeks for in an animal destined to fatten quickly 
and arrive at great weight. His neck is too long, his chest 
is too narrow, his sides are too flat, his limbs are too long 
in proportion to his body, or, in other words, his body is too 
small in proportion to his height. The Devon Oxis a kindly 


enough feeder, but he requires good pastures and a some-_ 


what favourable climate, and could barely subsist on food 
which would suffice to fatten some of the hardier mountain 
breeds of nearly his own size. 


* Mr Youatt, Library of Useful Knowledge. 


err 


SII cpm ay 


eemnre tence 


048 THE OX. 


But the defects in the form of the genuine Devons are 
capable of being removed by the care of the breeder. How- 
ever long the Devon has been in existence as a separate 
variety, nothing like care had been bestowed on its improve- 
ment in the country which it inhabits, until a recent period. 
Even until several years after the commencement of the last 
war, the breeders of Devonshire seem to have been ignorant 
that there was any thing remarkable in their native breed ; 
and they appear to have only become aware of its importance, 
and the profit of improving it, by the demand which arose for it 
in other districts. Since the beginning of the present century, 
however, the breed has received its full share of public at- 
tention. Many eminent breeders in different parts of the 
country have adopted it, and, by selection of the parents, 
and enlarged supplies of food given to the animals when 
young, have succeeded in imparting to it properties which it 
had not acquired in its native district. 

But, nevertheless, the Devon Breed, however much the 
defects of its conformation may be corrected, and however 
desirous graziers may be to procure it from the district in 
which it is reared for the purpose of fattening, is not calcu- 
lated to supplant other breeds to any great extent in this 
country, when the end is rearing as well as grazing. It does 
not equal in hardiness some others nearly similar in weight, 
as the Pembroke, the West Highland, and the Galloway. It 
falls short, in the weight at which it usually arrives, of the 
Short-Horned and Hereford Breeds, and will not generally 
yield so large a return as they will do from the period of birth 
to maturity, however well it may remunerate the grazier be- 
tween the periods of buying and selling. Neither is the 
breed well suited to the bringing up of calves, or to the hus- 
bandry of the dairy, in which the profit depends on obtaining 
a large quantity of milk for a considerable period of the year. 
For these reasons, the breed of North Devon, however greatly 
it is to be valued, is not now found to extend itself in dis- 
tricts where the richer pastures are found, and where the 


THE DEVON BREED. 349 


means exist of cultivating artificial provender. In such situa- 
tions, the larger individuals of the Short-Horned and Here- 
ford races are preferred by those whose purpose is breeding 
as well as grazing ; and we may be well assured that the in- 
terests of individuals have conducted them, in this respect, 
to the course which is most profitable. The Devon Breed, 


however, must always be held in estimation over a large tract 
of country. It will be sought for by those who purchase ? ae 
cattle to graze for a limited period, and sufficient inducement la 
is therefore held out to the Devonshire breeders to preserve . 


_ the purity of their native race, and to bring it to all the per- . 
fection to which, by a careful selection of the parents, and = 4 
liberal feeding of the young, it can be brought. There is no 
need of exaggerated statements of the superiority of the 
Devon Breed over others, in order to place it in its proper i 
rank. Like the West Highland, the Castle-Martin, and the 
Galloway Breeds, it has a high intrinsic value for the gra- | 
zier ; but assuredly it does not surpass, as some of its too 
eager admirers maintain, other breeds which arrive at greater 
weight, and attain earlier maturity. 

The Devonshire breeders adhere scrupulously to the deep 
red colour of the hair, and reject individuals having a ten- 
dency to produce white on the face and the body. This is a 
merely conventional test of purity and goodness, for certainly 
white is, still more than red, the pristine colour of the race, 
and its appearance ought not to be regarded as a sign of 
degeneracy. But although the strict adherence to a given 
colour may limit in some cases the selection of males and 

females for breeding, it tends in an eminent degree to ensure 

| the general purity of the breed. The deep blood-red colour 

of the pure North Devons is so peculiar, that there is no_ 

i“ other race in this country, in which an admixture of foreign.) 

| blood is so easily traced, or which, accordingly, has remained i 

so free from foreign intermixture. Inasmuch, then, as this 

| limitation of colour ensures uniformity in the typical charac- 

; ? ters of the race, it is beneficial ; and it is not, therefore, ex- 


350 THE OX. 


pedient that the agriculturists of North Devon should de- 
part from the standard of the purity of their beautiful breed 
which has been so long established. 

The Devon Breed extends from the northern division of the 
county into South Devon all the way to the British Channel. 
Here the red colour characteristic of the purer race becomes 
less bright, and white frequently appears on the body and 
extremities, and the animals become enlarged in size, corres- 
ponding with the increased fertility of the country, and as- 
Sume a coarser form. The South Devons, accordingly, are 
held in far inferior estimation to the variety proper to the 
higher country for ready fattening; but they are greatly 
valued in their own district as rising to a good weight, and 
supplying the larger beef which is in demand at the numerous 
shipping ports of the coast. For this latter purpose, indeed, 
the Durhams and Herefords would probably be found better 
adapted ; but if the breeders of South Devon shall continue 
to prefer the existing race, then surely the means ought to 
be used to improve it in the degree of which it is susceptible. 
It is absurd to say, as some have done, that the South Devon 
breed is bad in itself, and incapable of improvement. The 
South Devon Breed is only bad because sufficient attention 
has not been paid, by selection of the parents, to the improve- 
ment of the progeny. ; 

As connected in some characters with the Devon group, 
may be mentioned a variety of cattle rendered remarkable 
by the striking contrast of colours on the body, which is found 
in Somersetshire and some other of the south-western coun- 
| ties. It is usually termed the Sheeted Breed of Somerset- 
| shire. It has existed in the same parts of England from 
(time immemorial. The red colour of the hair has a light 
yellow tinge, and the white colour passes like a sheet over 
the body. The individuals are sometimes horned, but more 
frequently they are hornless. The cows are hardy, docile, 
and well suited to the dairy. The beef of the oxen is of 
good quality and well marbled. The breed has become rare, 


= 


THE SUSSEX BREED. 351 


which is to be regretted, since it is much better suited to the 
dairy than others that have been adopted. _ 

The peculiar marking which distinguishes these cattle is 
not confined to anyone breed. It appears amongst the cattle 
of Wales when they are crossed by the White Forest Breed ; 
and is frequent amongst those of Ireland, and used to be so 
amongst the older Galloways of Scotland. It is very com- 
mon in Holland, where the colours are black and white. It 
may be ascribed to the intermixture of two races having each 
a tendency to produce the pristine colour of the stock from 
which it is derived. Thus a mixture of the White Forest 
Breed and a Devon might produce an animal resembling the 
Sheeted Somerset, with the Black Falkland, one resembling 
the sheeted varieties of the Dutch, and so on. The pecu- 
liarity, when communicated, is very constant; and, when two \ 
animals possessing it are mixed together in blood, the pro- | 
geny never fails to preserve the marking of the parents. 


XV.—THE SUSSEX BREED. 


The North Devon Breed of cattle, it has been seen, in- 
habits the elevated district on the southern side of the Bris- 
tol Channel, and is manifestly derived from the older race 
which inhabited the same country. In passing from the 
greywacké district of Devonshire into the calcareous country 
to the eastward, comprehending the greater part of Somer- 
setshire, and the counties of Dorset, Wilts, Berks, and Hants, 
the Devon Breed ceases to appear, or, if found, is manifestly 
not indigenous to the districts, but derived from those to the 
westward. It reappears, however, in the county of Sussex, 
a portion of which differs entirely, in its geological charac- 
ters, from the districts with which it is in contact. The 
Weald of Sussex, or, as it termed by geologists, the Wealden, 
is believed to have been a deposite from some vast river flow- 
ing from a continent, no longer existing in its former state, 


nner? 


352 THE OX, 


and long accordingly before the historical era, and before the 
Island of Britain had assumed its present form. This stream 
of fresh water appears to have formed at its mouth a delta 
like that of the Ganges, the Nile, and other great rivers, 
washing along with it numerous animals, whose remains 
exist, and testify to the living generation the prodigious 
revolutions which this globe has undergone in its physical 


constitution and animated inhabitants. Amongst the amaz- 
ing monuments of a former age, which this remarkable delta 
presents, is a reptile which fed on herbage, and which, from 
the measurement made of its bones, appears to have been 
upwards of seventy feet in length ; and there are found, too, 
the remains of numerous other species, not one of which now 
inhabits the earth. The Wealden forms part of Sussex, and 
_ extends into Kent, and is distinguished by its surface being 


a tenacious clay, entirely distinct from the chalky soils which 
surround it. In later ages this tract became covered with 
dense forests, and is yet remarkable, beyond any part of 
England, for the number of noble trees which it produces. 


POE Aaa 
pti pe 


“The hithermore and northern side thereof,’ says Camden, 
in describing this part of Sussex, “is shaded most pleasantly 
with woods, like as in times past, the whole country through- 
out, which, by reason of the woods, was hardly passable. 
For the wood Andraswald, in the British language Coid 
Andred, taking the name of Anderida, the city next ad- 
joining, tooke up in this quarter, a hundred and twentie 
miles in length, and thirtie in bredth; memorable for the 
death of Segibert, King of the West Saxons, who being de- 
posed from his roiall throne, was in this place stabbed by a 
swineherd, and so died.” Long after the Romans landed 
in Britain, the Wealden continued to be a vast thicket of 
wood, in which the persecuted natives sought refuge, and 
it abounded with the Uri, and other wild animals of the 
Island, even until the times of the Norman princes. This, 
then, is a part of the country in which we might look for the 
preservation of ancient races of the domestic animals ; and, 


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THE SUSSEX BREED. 353 


accordingly, it is found that the same race of cattle which 
exists in the mountains of North Devon, yet survives in the 
Wealden. 

The breed of the Wealden is usually termed the Sussex 
Breed, from its being chiefly reared in that county. It pos- 
sesses all the essential characters of the Devon Breed, but 
more resembles the variety of South than of North Devon, 

being reared in a country which affords larger supplies of 
artificial food. It is accordingly of larger size than the 
North Devon Breed, and of coarser form. It has not, per- 
haps, been preserved in the same degree from foreign inter- 
mixture ; yet it is a very pure breed, and exhibits as great 
a uniformity of characters as almost any other in the Island. 

The Sussex is to be ranked amongst the larger breeds of 
the country. The skins of the individuals are covered with 
short hair, but have not usually the same unctuous feel 
which so eminently characterizes that of the true North 
Devons. Their horns are longer, approaching in this respect 

to the character of the Long-horned varieties of the central 
counties. Their shoulders are thick; and their legs, though 
moderately short, have not the fineness of bone which is dis- 
tinctive of the North Devons ; nor have they the same length 
of body and elegance of general form. The distinctive colour 
is red, but of a less florid shade than in the North Devons ; 
and often it is mixed with white on the face and body. The 
cows are restless, eminently deficient in the faculty of yield- 
ing milk, and little used accordingly for the regular dairy. 


They are likewise small as compared with the males, a 


character which seems to be common to all the members 
of the group with which they are associated, and which al- 


ways indicates a deficiency in the milching properties of the ~ 


females of a race of cattle. 

The practice of employing oxen in the labour of the farm 
is universal in the county of Sussex ; and the native breed is 
eminently suited to this purpose, combining weight of body 
with a sufficient degree of muscular activity. For the pur- 


Z 


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- REINA spear A ITN 


304 THE OX, 


poses of labour, indeed, the Suffolk Breed is equal, if not 
superior, to any in the kingdom. It has more action than 
the Hereford, and more physical strength than the Devon; 
and is superior to the Long-horned varieties for a combina- 
tion of activity and strength. The employment of oxen for 
labour prevails all over Sussex, but chiefly in the stiff soil 
of the Wealden. The animals are usually worked four, and 
sometimes six and even eight together; and heifers as well 
as oxen are employed. They are broken to the yoke at 
three years old, worked usually until the age of five or six, 
and then they are fattened for the butcher. The employment 
of oxen in the labours of the farm is recommended by certain 
apparent advantages, which has led to some erroneous con- 
clusions with respect to the extent to which these animals 
may be profitably employed in the ordinary business of the 
farms of this country. The Ox is reared to the age of labour 
at less expense than the Horse, his subsequent charge of 
maintenance is smaller, he requires less care and attend- 
ance, and at a certain age, when unfitted for labour, he can 
be fattened; whereas the Horse declines in value soon after 
his prime, and ultimately becomes useless. On the other 
hand, the Ox, although well suited for a slow and steady 
draught, such as the plough demands, is not so well adapted 
as the Horse for active motion, for distant journeying, or 
for those sudden and unequal exertions which the varied 
labours of a modern farm require. When oxen, too, are 
employed largely on the farm, and disposed of after two or 
three years’ labour, there is a continued recurrence to the 
training of young oxen for the yoke, by which means time, 
so necessary to be economised on a well-ordered farm, is 
lost in a degree which does not occur when horses are the 
beasts of labour. Even in those parts of the country where 
the working of oxen is the most largely practised, and where 
the breeds of the country are the best adapted for the pur- 
pose, few farmers attempt to cultivate their farms by oxen 
alone: they employ horse-teams in at least equal numbers ; 


; THE SUSSEX BREED. 355 
thus shewing, by their practice, that, even under circum- 
stances the most favourable to the employment of this kind 
of draught, the Horse possesses certain qualities in which 
the Ox is deficient, and that at best the use of oxen can only 
be subsidiary to that of horses on ordinary farms. The use 
of oxen has invariably declined in those parts of the country 
where improvements are the most extended, and where the 
most active system of farm-labour has been established ; and 
now it may be said, that the general use of oxen is confined to 
those parts of the country where the peculiar races of cattle 
suited for labour are reared. In all the districts where the 
Short-horned Breed of cattle ig established, the employment 
of oxen in labour is almost unknown ; and, in all the districts 
where the active labour of the turnip-culture is largely prac- 
tised, the Horse is almost exclusively made use of. Indeed, 


it may be said, that this is an arrangement indicating an | 


advanced state of agriculture. By means of it, the two kinds 


of animals are employed for the purposes to which they are, © 


respectively, the best adapted—the Horse for active labour ; 
the Ox for being reared the most quickly to that maturity 
which fits him for human food. It is with the especial view 
of directing attention to this result that these remarks are 
made. ‘The principle of breeding, when applied to an animal 
to be fattened, is to develope those properties which have 
relation to the earliest maturity of muscle and fat; and the 
principle of fattening is to apply to the animal the largest 
quantity of nutriment, from his birth to maturity, which con- 
sists with the preservation of his health, or which the means 
of feeding at our command may allow. But these principles 
cannot be fully applied when the oxen of the farm are to be 
employed for labour. The external form which indicates the 
fitness of an animal for the exertion of its physical powers 
is different from that which indicates its adaptation to the 
purpose of early fattening; and hence, the general employ- 
ment of oxen in tillage is unfavourable to due attention to 
another class of properties, while it does not admit of that 


8 ech deeds te 
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ES ah ere tn gE EY anes 


356 THE OX. 


continued feeding from the birth which brings the animal 
soonest to the maturity required. Reasons, then, it will be 
seen, exist for confining the use of oxen for labour within 
certain limits, and for not extending the system to parts of 
the country where breeds of animals unsuited to the purpose 
are now reared, or where a different system of agriculture 
is established. 

The Breed of Sussex has, like every other, had its warm ad- 
mirers, as well as its too prejudiced opponents. If it has not 
obtained that favour which has been sufficient to cause its 
extension to other parts of the country, this has not been 
because the breed is naturally bad, but because the same 
attention has not been employed in calling forth the proper- 
ties now most generally valued in a race of cattle. It is nct 
until a period comparatively recent, that much general atten- 
tion has been paid to the improvement of the Sussex Breed, 
with respect to symmetry and early maturity. Latterly, how- 
ever, great attention has been paid to these properties. Va- 
rious eminent breeders have employed the usual means for 
correcting the defects of the existing race; and, at the pre- 
sent time, numerous admirable oxen are derived from this 
county, to supply the larger. markets with which it is in com- 
munication. 


XVL—THE GLAMORGAN BREED. 


The county of Glamorgan is a district of the coal-forma- 
tion, situated on the Bristol Channel. In its geological cha- 
racters, it differs entirely from the elevated parts of Wales 
with which it is in contact. Towards the north, it consists 
of mountains producing a coarse herbage of grasses, largely 
mixed with sedges, rushes, and other innutritious plants ; its 
central part is less elevated, and more productive, but still 
chiefly adapted to pasturage; its southern division lying on 
the coast, and extending from six to ten miles inland, forms 


THE GLAMORGAN BREED. 307 


a fine undulating vale, mostly on a substratum of carbonifer- 
ous limestone. From time immemorial, this part of Wales 
has been distinguished for the production of numerous herds 
of cattle. ‘“ The air,” says Speed, “ is temperate, and gives 
more content to the mind than the soile doth fruit, or ease 
unto travellers ; the hills being high and very many, which, 
from the north notwithstanding, are lessened as it were by 
degrees ; and towards the sea-coasts the country becometh 
somewhat plain, which part is the best, both for plenty of 
grain and populous of inhabitants. The rest, all mountain, 
is replenished with cattel, which is the best means to wealth 


which this shire doth afford; upon whose hills you may be-- 


hold whole herds of them feeding; and from whose rocks 
most clear springing waters through the valleys trinkling, 
which sportingly do pass with a most pleasant sound—.” 
The cattle of Glamorganshire, naturalized in a tract of 
country differing somewhat in its vegetable productions from 
the higher parts of Wales, have assumed a class of charac- 
ters proper to themselves. The colour of the hair, like that 
of the Devons, tends to red, in place of the black character- 
istic of the races of the higher country; but the skin pos- 
sesses the same orange colour which distinguishes the Pem- 
broke and allied breeds, manifesting an identity of origin in 
these races. It has been imagined by some that the pecu- 
liavities of the Glamorgan breed are due to foreign intermix- 
ture, and this has been referred to so remote a period as the 
age of William Rufus, when certain Norman knights seized 
violently upon the country, and partitioned it amongst them- 
selves and their retainers. But this country possessed its 
native cattle long before the Normans had acquired a footing 
in it, and the pursuits of these barbarous soldiers were far 
other than the improvement of flocks and herds. Rapine, 
the chase, and warlike exercises, occupied their thoughts ; 
and the occupations of peaceful industry were left to their 
- dependants, too ignorant and oppressed to think of any thing 
beyond the rude wants of their condition. In such a state 


i 
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“dl 
nea: aeattnanse aa eet 


358 THE OX. 


of society, the improvement of breeds of cattle by foreign im- 
portations, could scarcely take place. Approaching nearer 
to our own times, when freedom of intercourse between dif- 
ferent parts of the country was established, it may be sup- 
posed that cattle from other districts found their way into 
Glamorganshire, but not in sufficient numbers to obliterate, 
or change essentially, the characters of the native cattle. 
These, from some old notices, seem to have been of a red- 
dish colour. A Welsh writer, upwards of a hundred years 
ago, describes the Cows as being of large size, some red and 
some pied; which sufficiently agrees with the aspect of 
the present breed, whose colour is a dark reddish-brown, 
broken with white. Within the last forty or fifty years, in- 
deed, various attempts have been made to improve the cattle 
of Glamorganshire by crosses with the Hereford, Devon, 
and other breeds; but still the essential characteristics of 
the native race remain sufficiently distinct and uniform to 
constitute a well-defined breed. 

The breed of Glamorganshire differs in the size of the in- 
dividuals, according as they are the natives of the hilly parts 
of the country, or of the lower and maritime. The breed, 
however, is essentially the same in both districts, and varied 
only by the condition of the country, and the care with which 
the animals have been selected and reared. In the higher 
country, where their food is the rough herbage of mountains, 
the cattle are in a corresponding degree small, but coarse 
and robust in form, active like other mountain cattle, but 
slow in arriving at maturity. In the Vale, where the her- 
bage is fine, and the means exist of cultivating artificial pro- 
vender, the cattle become of larger size, of more developed 
forms, and having a greater aptitude to fatten readily. The 
Glamorgans of the lower country fall short of the ordinary 
size of the Durhams and Herefords; but yet they are of the 
larger class of cattle. Their horns are small, fine, and point- 
- ing somewhat upwards; and in the breed of the hills, the horns 


have yet more of the upright curvature. The skin is generally 


THE GLAMORGAN BREED. 859 


orange-yellow, and the individuals are most esteemed in 
which this colour prevails. The hair is dark-brown, usually 
. broken. with white; and, very generally there is a uniform 
marking of the latter colour, extending along the belly, and 
forming a streak along the back. Their chests are well 
formed, with moderate dewlaps, and their beef is excellently 
marbled. The Cows are exceedingly good milchers, giving a 
rich yellow cream. The domestic dairy has always been an 
important object of attention in this and other parts of Wales, 
and hence the property of yielding abundant milk has been 
sought for and obtained in the races of the country. In this 
respect the Cows of Glamorgan differ essentially from those 
of Hereford and North Devon, in which the attention of 
breeders has been directed to grazing, and not to the dairy. 


It is an opinion frequently expressed by Glamorgan breed- \ 
ers, that the native breed had been injured by an intermix- | 
ture of other races. This deterioration is supposed to have | 


taken place after the commencement of the last war; and 
one of the proofs of it cited is, that the Glamorgan cattle, 
which had formerly been in great request for grazing, began 
to lose favour in the districts to which they had before been 


carried, as in Leicestershire, and other grazing counties. This | 


effect, however, is sufficiently accounted for by the increased 


attention which had begun to be paid throughout the country | — 


to the improvement of live stock, and to the extension of su- 
perior breeds. It is less likely that the Glamorgan cattle had 
become deteriorated, than that the breeders of them had 
failed to keep pace with those of other parts of the country. 
With respect to the presumed mixture of other blood, this has 


probably been as little in Glamorganshire as in most parts of | 


the kingdom. The native farmers appear to have long taken 
a peculiar pride in their ancient breed, and are at this hour 
very generally as tenacious of its purity as any breeders can 
be supposed to be. Individuals, indeed, chiefly in the Vale, 
have made experiments in crossing, just as has happened in 
other parts of the country ; and insensible mixtures may have 


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860 THE OX. 


taken place with the Herefords and cattle of the nei ghbour- 
ing districts ; but that the Glamorgan breed has remained 
wonderfully pure, especially in the higher country, may be 
inferred from the uniformity of characters which it has pre- 
served. Various modern breeders, instead of a system of 
erossing, have, with better judgment, directed their attention 
to the improving of the breed which their country has for so 


many ages produced. These improvements have been chiefly 
carried on in the Vale, where the means are favourable to 
the rearing of a superior breed of cattle. The result of these 
experiments has shewn, that the native Glamorgan affords 
the basis of a valuable breed, requiring only that the same 
eare and time shall be given to breeding and rearing which 
must be bestowed in order to bring any race of animals to a 
perfect state. Many of these improved Glamorgans have 
been able to contend successfully, with respect to early ma- 
turity, symmetry, and even weight, with the Durhams and 
Herefords ; and they are certainly superior to either of these 
breeds in their adaptation to the dairy. No question, then, 
can exist, that the breeders of Glamorgan are able .to bring 
the breed of the country to the degree of size, aptitude to 
fatten, and economical value, which consists with the na- 
ture of the district, and the state of its agriculture. The 
improved Short-horns have, indeed, been largely introduced 
into the Vale of Glamorgan, as into most other parts of the 
country where the means exist of supplying them with suf- 
ficient food ; and there has been a great inducement to culti- 
vate them, seeing that this breed has been already perfected, 
and that it is found in numbers sufficient to allow any one to 
obtain and rear it, whereas the finest class of Glamorgans 
are only as yet in the hands of a few breeders who have made 
them the subject of especial attention. But, excellent as the 
imported breed is, this advantage would have resulted from 
adhering to the older race, that the whole county would have 
then been occupied by a uniform race; and that from the 
lower country to the higher superior males might have been 


Se a 


oe . ¥ 
THE GLAMORGAN BREED. 361 


carried, so that the cattle of the mountains would have been 


gradually improved to the degree which was suitable to the 
nature of the pastures. As it is, this advantage will not be 
obtained by the introduction of the Short-horns, for these are 
unsuited to the higher country, and the degree of cultivation 
which must necessarily exist init. The cultivators of the 
superior Glamorgans will find it difficult, in a district so li- 
mited, to pursue their improvements in opposition to the ex- 
tension of another breed ; and Glamorganshire will probably 
present the singular example of having the general improve- 
ment of the live-stock of the country retarded by the impor- 
tation of a breed in itself good, and calculated to benefit the 
individuals who adopt it. But it is the interests of the 
breeders themselves that must determine the question as to 
the breeds to be adopted, and it cannot be supposed that 
considerations founded on general benefit will prevail against 
private interests. But this the landed gentlemen of the 
country may do: they may and ought to give all encourage- 
ment to the preservation and improvement of that race which 
is naturalized, which occupies so great a part of the country, 
and which experience shews to be susceptible of so much im- 
provement. The native and imported breeds should be kept 
distinct and pure.—Besides the Short-horned, the Dairy 
Breed of Ayrshire has been introduced into this district, 
though it is difficult to see with what aim. The native cattle 
already possess the qualities of milch cows in a very high 
degree, and they have this advantage over the Ayrshire, that 
they are the natives of the country. Individuals may, in- 
deed, if they think fit, possess themselves of an Ayrshire or 
any other stock, but no benefit could result from mixing these 
strangers with the native race. 


THE OX. 


XVII.—THE HEREFORDSHIRE BREED. 


Extending along the base of the mountains of Wales is a 
tract of fertile country, calculated to increase the size, and 
so to modify the characters, of the cattle which it maintains. 
This effect is seen in the fine race produced in the Vale of 
Glamorgan, in the mixed races which occupy the lower parts 
of Montgomeryshire, and yet more in those of the richly cul- 
tivated county of Hereford. If we suppose that at any time 
a common race of cattle occupied the higher country and the 
lower, we must believe that its characters would gradually 
diverge as the animals became naturalized in mountains of 
natural herbage, or became the inhabitants of a cultivated 
country capable of yielding artificial food. “Herefordshire 
was of old a part of the country of the Cambro-Britons, but 
at a very early period fell under the dominion of the Anglo- 
Saxons. Yet although it has thus for a vast period been 
/ connected with Wales only by contiguity of situation, its 
' cattle retain the traces of a common ancestry. They have 
that orange-yellow colour of the skin which distingnishes the 
Pembrokes and the Devons, and that medium length of horns 
which separates these breeds and their varieties from the 
race termed Long-horned. It cannot be supposed that they 
have been kept free from intermixture with the Long-horned 
and other varieties of the lower country, but they may be re- 
ferred to that group of breeds which comprehends the Pem- 
broke, the Devon, the Sussex, and the Glamorgan, and which 
Some writers have proposed to term Middle-horned, a desig- 
nation which distinguishes them from the Long-horned on the 
one hand, and the Short-horned on the other, but which does 
not sufficiently separate them from other very different va- 
_ rieties, as those which occupied man y of the former forests 
of the country, and even from the older Yorkshire Short- 
horns. Of the changes which the Herefords have, until a 
period comparatively recent, undergone, from mixture or 


a ad 


THE HEREFORDSHIRE BREED. 363 


otherwise, we know nothing from any authentic records. 
When we first obtain accounts of them, they appear to have 
been of a good size, but of mixed characters. The Dairy 
was at a former period largely pursued in Herefordshire, the 
effect of which must have been to collect together animals of 
mixed descent, and only agreeing in the common character 
of yielding much milk. Many of them were black, many red, 
and so far were they from exhibiting the common charac- 
ters of a breed or family, that a skilful observer, who saw 


them late in the last century, believed them at first to be a | 


mixture of Welsh Cattle and Long-horns, although it appears, 
from the remains of the older race which yet exist, that the 
greater part of them consisted of a race of red cattle, which, 
in colour, and in the upward curvature of the horns, re- 


sembled the coarser kinds of Devons. 


But whatever were the characters of the former cattle of 


Herefordshire, the breed, as it now exists, owes all its repu- \ 


tation to modern changes. About the year 1769, the late Mr 
Benjamin Tomkins began a system of breeding, which ulti- 
mately exercised a great influence on the stock of this part 
of England. It appears that size, and adaptation to the 
dairy and the purposes of labour, were then the properties 
chiefly sought for by the breeders of Herefordshire. Mr 
Tomkins, when a young man, was in the employment of an 
individual, afterwards his father-in-law, and had the especial 
charge of the dairy. Two cows had been brought to this 
dairy, supposed to have been purchased at the fair of King- 
ton, on the confines of Wales. Tomkins remarked the ex- 
traordinary tendency of these animals to become fat. On 
his marriage he acquired these two cows, and commenced 


breeding from them on his own account. The one with more \ 


of white, he called Pigeon, and the other, of a rich red colour,, 


with a spotted face, he called Mottle ; and it is ania! | 


that the marking of the two cows may be distinguished i in / 
their descendants at the present day. Mr Tomkins appears 
to have selected good cows where he could obtain them in 


\ 
$ . | 
> 
: 
: 


364 THE OX. 


the district, but to have reared his bulls from his own stock, 
although, in the earlier stage of his improvements, he some- 
times made use of other bulls when they suited his purpose. 
After a time, however, he abandoned this practice, and con- 
fined himself in breeding to his own stock. It thus appears 
that the principle of his system was selection of the most 
suitable individuals for breeding, and that having produced, 
by this mean, animals of the properties required, he con- 
_fmed himself to his own herd. Having arrived at the im- 
| provement sought for, he communicated to the individuals, 
| by intermixture with one another, that uniformity and per- 


* manence of character which constitutes a breed In this 


latter respect, however, he was not so successful as Bake- 
well, and many of the Herefords deviate considerably from a 


common type. ‘Tomkins, indeed, had what he termed his 
different Zines of stock, as his Mottle line, and his Pigeon or 
Silver line, from which we are merely to infer that his ani- 
mals had not been so amalgamated as to acquire a perma- 


nent class of common characters. Tomkins continued his 
_ improvements during a long life. He was a person of very 
retired and unassuming habits, seldom, if ever, shewing his 
cattle from home, or concerning himself much about what 
was passing beyond his own circle. In this respect his con- 
duct was the reverse of that of his distinguished contem- 
porary Bakewell, who took every opportunity to derive ad- 
vantage from his stock, and to spread the reputation of it 
throughout the country. In one respect, indeed, the course 
of the two breeders was similar. Each maintained the ut- 
most reserve with respect to his mode of practice, and the 
sources from which he derived his original stock. It is merely 
known that Tomkins began breeding from the humble stock 
of cows which he had early acquired; but of the breed of 
these cows nothing is known, nor of the animals, male or fe- _ 
male, which he afterwards made use of for extending and 
improying his herd. It may be believed that the selection 
was made from the best of the cattle then existing in the dis- 


—___—_# 


THE HEREFORDSHIRE BREED. 365 


trict; and that thus the breed of Tomkins was formed from 
the pre-existing cattle of Herefordshire, rather than by any 
mixture with dissimilar kinds proper to other parts of the 
country. The Short-horns were then of little estimation be- 
yond the districts which produced them, and there is little 
appearance of the Long-horned blood in the modern breed. 
A resemblance, indeed, has generally been sought for between 
it and the Devons. The resemblance, however, is merely 
such as may be supposed to arise from a,common and distant 
ancestry ; and the form of the modern Herefords differs | 
greatly from that which is typical of the true Devons. There J 
is nothing, therefore, in the breed as it now exists, which can | 
lead us to the conclusion, that its original improver had re- i 

| 


& 
E 


course to any other races than those which he found na- | 
turalized in his native district. | 
From the unobtrusive course pursued by Tomkins, it was 
only by slow degrees that the merit of his stock became 
known, and its influence felt; and early as had been the 
period at which the improvement of it had commenced, the 
Hereford Breed was late in being brought prominently before 
the public, as one possessed of the valuable properties which 
are now, by common consent, ascribed to it. The progress 
of the breed, however, though slow, was sure, and it silently 


extended itself throughout all the county of Hereford, gra- 


dually’ assimilating to a more uniform standard the stock of 
the county ; so that Herefordshire became the most import- 
ant breeding district of a distinct family of the larger cattle 
in the West of England. Tomkins himself died at an ad- 
vanced age, having realized the honourable competence to 
which his high merits as an original, skilful, and successful — 
breeder, entitled him. Eminent agriculturists in the district 
and elsewhere contributed to extend the reputation of the 
breed ; amongst whom it may not be regarded invidious to 
mention the names of the Honourable George Germain, Mr 
Price, and the Earl of Talbot, who became purchasers of the 


366 . THE OX. 


stock of Tomkins, and cultivated it with a scrupulous regard 
to the purity of descent. 

The modern Hereford is a breed of the larger class, the 
oxen attaining a weight scarcely surpassed by any other in 
the kingdom. The colour is a dark red, or reddish-brown, 
with white faces, and more or less of white on the back and 
belly ; and the aim of modern breeders has for a considerable 
| period been to produce more of the white colour, which is 
| characteristic of the Pigeon or Silver line of ‘Tomkins, and to 
which the preference has long been given. The horns are of 
medium length and spreading, but sometimes very short in 
the bulls; the forehead is broad, and the countenance open 
and mild; the shoulder is well formed, and the chest broad 

and deep. Their beef brings a good price in the market, al- 
( though it is not so well marbled as that of some other breeds, 
even of the lower country. They tend to accumulate fat 
upon the rump, but not in the same degree as the Long-horns. 
They fatten readily, and on ordinary food; and hence the 
general estimation in which the oxen are held for the pur- 
- poses of grazing. Although a docile race, the bulls frequently 
become vicious when old. The cows, like the Devons, are 
small as compared withthe size to which the oxen attain. 
They are likewise indifferent milchers, so that this breed is 
rarely employed in the regular dairy. This must be ascribed 
to the exclusive attention bestowed by modern breeders on 
the fattening property, for the unimproved Herefords do not 
seem to be deficient in this property, and the Glamorgans, 
which are nearly allied to the Hereford Breed, possess it in 
a high degree. 

By the acquisition of this beautiful breed, Herefordshire 
has become a breeding rather than a grazing district. Com- 
paratively few of the Herefords are fattened in the county 
itself. They are bought by the graziers of other districts, 
and thus fattened for the London and other markets. Num- 
bers of them, after being worked for ‘several years, are car- 


THE HEREFORDSHIRE BREED. (367 


ried to these markets, presenting as fine specimens of the 
matured and fattened Ox as are to be seen in any country. 
The Hereford breeders naturally set a high value upon this 
breed. They esteem it to be the finest in England. It has, 
indeed, many excellent properties for the grazier ; but the 
general judgment of the breeders has long been pronounced 
in favour of another breed, likewise perfected by the skill of 
the breeder—the Short-horned Teeswater, or, as it is now 
frequently termed, the Durham Breed. This has for many 
years been progressively extending, and been carried even 
within the native districts of the Herefords. The Herefords 
will frequently pay the graziers better than the Durhams ; 


but the value of a breed is to be determined, not by the pro- | 


fit which it yields between buying and selling, but by that 
which it yields to the breeder and the feeder conjointly from 
its birth to its maturity ; and taking into account the early 
maturity of the Short-horns, and the weight to which they 
arrive, it may without error be asserted that they merit the 
preference which has been given to them. The two breeds 
have been sometimes crossed with one another ; but, although 
fine animals are produced by a first cross, the future progeny 
rarely equals the parents of pure blood. Unless, therefore, 
the Herefords were to be crossed until they becante Short- 
horns, the proper course seems to be to preserve the two 
breeds in a state of purity, the breeder and the grazier con- 
tenting themselves with the excellencies which each has ac- 
quired. 


XVITI.—THE LONG-HORNED BREED. 


The term Long-horned, when applied to a variety of Bri- 
tish cattle, denotes not only a simple character of the horns, 
namely, their extension or length, but a certain Similarity in 
the external form of the animals, which united a great pro- 
portion of the older cattle of the country into what might be 


2 nl nen nsse 
canons 


per a ne nn - = SS = = 
aa CE OE OE ge 


368 THE OX. 


termed a breed. Length and grossness of horns may be sup- 
posed to be connected, in certain circumstances, with the 
nature of the pastures and the humidity of the climate. A 
| moist climate tends to produce thickness of skin and length 
of hair; and the corneous system is so connected with the 
* euticular, that it is reasonable to believe, that what affects 
the skin and its covering, may exercise an action on the 
parts connected with them. The true Long-horns seem to 
have been the inhabitants of the western parts of the British 
‘Islands. They extended nearly over all the plains of Ireland, 
and the greater part of the mountains, and yet form the pre- 
vailing race of that country. In England, they occupied Lanca- 
shire, extending northward into Cumberland and Westmore- 
land, and southward through Cheshire and Shropshire, to 
the districts on the Severn, and even into Somersetshire, 


where the traces of them still exist in the higher country. 
From the mouth of the Severn they extended inland through 
the midland counties even to Leicestershire. They were 
found, and are yet reared, in Derbyshire, and partially occu- 
pied, and still occupy, the bleak range of heathy hills which. 
extend from that county northwards, and which divide the 
more westerly and humid country on the Atlantic from the 
eastern and drier on the German ocean. But, on the eastern 
slope of this range of hills, they gradually diminished in 
numbers, until the traces of them were lost; and they were 
not found within the period of any records in the south- 
\. eastern counties of the Chalk. Although they had stretched 
through the midland counties as far to the eastward as Lei- 
cestershire, yet, as they extended eastward, their characters 
appear to have undergone a progressive change ; for, al- 
though Leicestershire became in time the centre of a highly 
cultivated breed of Long-horns, the older cattle which pos- 
sessed it seem either to have been a mixed race, or to have 
deviated greatly from the type of the true Long-horns of the 
western counties. Thus the Long-horned Breed appears 


to have been derived from the western and more humid 
8 


plains, and smaller in the mountains. The prevailing colour q 


THE LONG-HORNED BREED. 369 


Countries, and to have disappeared, or lost its distinctive | 

characters, in the eastern and drier; and hence it seems | 
reasonable to infer, that it owed the characters which dis- 
tinguished it to the influence of climate. Yet in the west of 
Ireland, in the moistest climate of Europe, and spread exten- 
Sively over the whole country, there is a race, the Kerry, 

which differs, in almost every respect that constitutes a 

breed, from the Long-horns. The Wild White Forest Breed, i 
though reared for ages in parks in the west of England and | 
Scotland, never assumes the characters of the Long-horned : 
race. The North Devon, and all the native cattle of the 
humid mountains of Wales, are alike removed from it; and . 
in all the west of Scotland, in tracts exposed to the con- } 


tinued vapours of the Atlantic ocean, no trace of the charac- / 


ters distinctive of the Long-horned race presents itself, / 
The Kerry Breed, the Devon, the Welsh, and the Scotch | 


man from the negro; and the two classes retain their charac- 
ters distinct, though naturalized in the Same tract of country, . 
beyond all records, The influence of climate alone, then, 
does not satisfactorily account for the formation of breeds, , 
which, naturalized undep conditions apparently similar, differ _ 
80 greatly from one another ; and we are rather conducted | ; 
to the inference, that races So unlike were derived from dis- } I 
tinet sources. But if the Kerry and other breeds inhabit-_ 
ing the country have been derived from natural Stocks dis- if 
tinct from the Long-horned, all the traces of their naturali- i 
zation have been lost in the obscurity of time. 

The Long-horneq Breed, as it existed before the artificial ; 
improvements to which it has been subjected, varied in Size F 
with the natural and acquired fertility of the districts to 
which it had become indigenous, being larger in the richer 


of the animals was black and brown, and they had more or 

less of white on the body, a streak of that colour always \~ . 

extending along the Spine. They had thick dark skins, and | 
. 2A i 

{ 


370 THE OX. 


abundant hair. Their horns were long, and bending down- 
wards; a peculiarity; however, which seemed to give place 
to the influence of external agents, since, at the eastern and 
southern limits of the breed in England, their horns fre- 
quently turned upwards, in the manner of other cattle in- 
habiting these districts. Their bodies were long, their sides 
flat, and their shoulders heavy as compared with their hind - 
quarters. They were hardy, capable of subsisting without 
shelter, and on indifferent food, but they were slow in arriv- 
ing at maturity. “Their flesh was of a dark. colour, and the 
fat of a yellow tinge. They were of docile tempers, and 
steady in the yoke, though sluggish in their motions. They 
/ were with difficulty amalgamated with other varieties, re- 
| taining with greater gbstinacy than any other race their dis- 
\ _tinetive characters. The females were suited to the domes- 
“tie dairy, yielding good milk, though not in large quantity. 
This breed having been naturalized in Ireland from a 
period of unknown antiquity, it may be believed that the 
fertile pastures of that country would tend to produce a 
great development of form and size in the animals. Very 
large cattle, accordingly, appear to have been produced on 
the rich plains of the Shannon and elsewhere. Early writers, 
however, give us little information further than that the 
country abounded in cattle, which were the chief wealth of 
the inhabitants. But soon after the middle of, last century, 


competent judges bear testimony to the excellence of many of 
the Long-horned cattle of Ireland. Mr Bakewell found, in 
the fair of Ballinasloe, individuals of the breed, which he re- 
garded as inferior only to those which he himself had per- 
fected; and it may therefore be believed, that cattle were 
produced in Ireland not inferior to those of the same race in 
the sister island. In England, the nursery of this breed was 


the county of Lancaster. Writers frequently refer to the 
fair beeves, with spreading horns, of this part of England. 
« A man may judge,” says Cambden, “of the soile partly 
by the constitution and complexion of the inhabitants, who 


THE LONG-HORNED BREED. 371 


are to see to, passing faire and beautifull, and in part, if you 
please, by the cattaille. For in their kine and ‘oxen, which 
have goodly heads and faire Spread horns, and are in body well 
proportionate withall, you shall find in maner no one point 
wanting, that Mago, the Carthaginian doth require, as Colu- 
mella specifieth out of him.” And another and later writer 
observes of the same country, “ The goil, for the generality, 
is not very fruitful > yet it produces such numbers of cattle, 
of such large proportion, and such goodly heads and horns, 
as the kingdom of Spain doth scarce the like.” From Lan- 


and Cumberland, but across the intervening moorlands into 
Yorkshire, occupying the more elevated tracts which formed 
the ancient county of Richmond. The district of Craven, in 
an especial degree, became distinguished for its breed of 
Long-horng ; So that bulls, we are informed, used to be sent 
from it to other districts, even to Leicestershire and the mid- 
land counties, The Craven Breed ig still to be found in the 
Same district, now crossed by the improved variety of the 
midland counties, but differing in no essential respect from 
the native race of Lancashire. 

The ultimate improvement of this breed, however, took 
place, not in Lancashire or Craven, but in the midland coun- 
ties; and we are informed that breeders there had been 
early in the habit of procuring stock from Lancashire and 
the adjoining districts, for the purpose of improving their 
herds. Amongst the earlier breeders of this part of Eng- 
land is mentioned Sip Thomas Gresley, in the county of Staf- 
ford. He is said to have kept a fine stock of Long-horng, at 
his seat, near Burton on the Trent. Little, however, is 
known of the breeding experiments of Sir Thomas Gresley ; 
but it is well established that another individual, My Web- 
ster of Canley, near Coventry, in the county of Warwick, 
had, sometime about the middle of last century, become one. 
of the most eminent breeders of Long-horns in that part of 


England. His stock became known as the Canley Breed. 


4 


Sie THE OX. 


He is said to have bred on the basis of cows derived from 

the stock of Sir Thomas Gresley, but to have afterwards 

resorted for bulls to Lancashire and Westmoreland. The 

Canley Breed is described by contemporaries, as being the 

best that had been then produced in England. 

-\ The Canley Breed, however, after a time, gave place to 
one yet more distinguished, the formation of which became 
an era in the history of breeding in this country, and ulti- 
mately exercised an important influence on a great propor- 
tion of the Long-horns reared in the British Islands. Robert 
Bakewell of Dishley, in the county of Leicester, was born at 
that place about the year 1725. His father and grandfather 
had been considerable farmers upon the same estate; and, 
on his succeeding to the farm of Dishley, about the year 

1755, he began to pursue with diligence those plans for the 
improvement of the domestic animals, which had, doubtless, 
occupied the thoughts of his earlier years. He cultivated 
alike the Sheep, the Ox, the Horse, and the Hog, and ap- 
pears to have early laid down a set of principles to which he 
steadily adhered. He sought for the best animals of their 
respective kinds, and, coupling these together, endeavoured 
to develope, in the highest degree, those characters which he 
deemed good. He appears to have disregarded, or made 
light of, size in all the animals which he reared, and to have 
looked mainly to those characters of form which indicate a 


disposition to arrive at early maturity, and become readily 
fat. He acted to the fullest extent upon the principle that 
the properties of the parents are communicated to their de- 
seendants. This led him to attach the highest importance 

/ to what is termed blood, or breeding from individuals the 
descendants of those of approved qualities. A maxim of his 
was, that “like begets like’—a principle in nothing new, 

\ but never, perhaps, acted upon in breeding to the like degree 
. before. He aimed at producing the large cylindrical body, 
in all the animals destined to be fattened, and a smallness 
] of the head, neck, and extremities, or what is called fineness 


ee THE LONG-HORNED BREED. : 373 — 


of bone. A Saying of his, often quoted, is, that “all was 
useless that was not beef ;” and hence hig endeavour to lessen 
the quantity of what is usually termed offal. He adopted, 
too, the homely profit-and-logs maxim of breeding the ani- 
=. mals large in the parts which are of most value to be sold ; 
and hence, in his breed of cattle, he made the shoulders com: ‘' 
paratively small, and the hind-quarters proportionally large. ,, 
He had a thorough confidence in his own judgment, and 
relied entirely upon his own resources. In the whole series 
of his numerous experiments, he “appears to have consulted, 
and even trusted, no one. It is said that his only confi- 
dant was an old Shepherd, who alone knew what animals i 


a ee 


tion, they knew nothing of the course of hig experiments ; | 
and when it ig mentioned, that amongst these individuals 
3 were the late distinguished Earl of Leicester, Mr Cully, Mr 
be Buckley, and others likely to take a deep interest in the pro- 
ceedings, it will be seen what a methodised system of caution 
and secrecy was pursued. He seems to have obtained the 
espect of those connected with him, for his character and 
Judgment; but within the circle of reserve which he cast 
around him, where his own proceedings were concerned, no i 
one was permitted to pass; and, strange to Say, he left not 4 
ES behind him a Single written record of hig curious experi- i 
ments. It is not probable that this can be ascribed to any 
higher motive than the selfishness of a trader, careful to pre- 
| vent others from profiting by his acquired knowledge. But 


: yet it manifested a certain strength of character, and may : | 
shew that Bakewell, though actuated by ordinary motives, | 
was not an ordinary man. He Struck out for himself anew 7) 
course of action ; and, carrying on a long course of peculiar . | 


experiments, ultimately Succeeded, and laid down, by his ex- 

ample, principles which experience has since proved to be 

sound. There had not before been another Bakewell; and 
_ all who have sought the Same end have but followed in his j 


| 
_ 
ae 
aa 
i 
j 
; 
i 
3 
4 
4 
o> 
Fe 
Hy 
at 
f 


374 THE OX. 


track. Amidst many disappointments, he never despaired of 
his ultimate purpose, but bore up against ridicule, neglect, 
and predictions of failure, till the end. He was at one time 
involved in great pecuniary difficulties, but at length he suc- 
ceeded in all his plans, and left a competent fortune to his 
successors. Even after he had succeeded in perfecting his 
stock, he kept all kinds of animals in his park, and was con- 
stantly engaged in his favourite experiments. He died, 
universally regarded as the most successful breeder that tifis 
country had produced, in his 70th- year. 

Much fruitless inquiry has arisen regarding the precise 
course followed by Bakewell in forming his breed of Long- 
horns. The opinion, seemingly founded on the best autho- 
rities, 1s, that he obtained some of his first cows from Mr 
Webster of Canley, but that he likewise selected elsewhere 
the best animals, male and female, that he could obtain. He 
is said to have purchased, amongst others, a very fine cow 
from Sir William Gordon of Garrington, near Loughborough, 
and from her to have had a fine bull, which he called Two- 


‘penny, because a person had observed of him that he was 


not worth twopence. This bull became the most celebrated 
of the early stock of Bakewell, and is constantly referred to 
in the pedigrees of the improved Long-horns. It must be 
observed, however, that other accounts are given of the de- 
scent of Twopenny; and that much uncertainty necessarily 
exists in everything that relates to the origin of the Dishley 
stock, since this was precisely the point of practice which 


Bakewell himself desired to involve in mystery. 


Mr Bakewell adopted the practice of breeding from ani- 
mals without relation to their affinities in blood, in a degree 
which had perhaps never before been attempted. He pro- 
bably adopted this system from the very commencement of 
his experiments, and ultimately confined himself entirely to 
his own herd; one exception only being recorded, when, at 
a late period, he bought a cow from Mr Harris, a descendant, 
however, from the Dishley stock. The effect was, that he 


THE LONG-HORNED BREED. 375 


gave a permanent uniformity to the characters of his ani- \ 
mals, and formed, after a time, a distinct and well-defined / 
breed. Further, the effect of continually breeding from ani- 
mals near of blood, is attended with the effect of giving a 
delicacy of temperament and form to the progeny. It dimi- ; 
nishes the size of the bones, and produces, as it were, a ten- 
dency to arrive at premature age. The animals, getting 
Soon old, arrive quickly at maturity of bone and muscle, 
which is the very end aimed at by the breeder. Bakewell 
probably adopted the System from the mere desire of pre- 
Serving the properties of form which his stock had acquired ; 
but he would learn by experience, in the Sequel; that the 
effect was likewise to produce a more complete development 
of those properties. 

The success of Bakewell] called other’ breeders into the 


Canley, and hired the bull Twopenny from Mr Bakewell, 
from which stock he bred several fine cows. He continued 


‘to hire bulls from Mr Bakewell, and, in particular, one in 


the year 1778 or 1779, called D, which, by one of his first 


* Garrick, a bull, 5 years old, by Shakspeare, of Bro- 


ken-horn Beauty, which came of Long-horn Beauty, | 1.215 0 0 
brought : ; : : ‘ : : : 
Sultan, 2 years old, by Broken-horn Beauty, 5 ‘ « 22010 0 
Washington, by Shakspeare, out of Washington’s mother, 215 5 9g 
Young Sultan, one year old, by Garrick, ; : 7 “210. “O' 26 
Brindled Beauty, a cow, by Shakspeare, of labial $4 0 0 
Beauty, : ; : : : % F ; 
Cow, by Shakspeare, of Broken-horn Beauty, . . 2 Tee ie 8 
Cow, by a son of old D, brother to Shakspeare, é - 194 5 0 &e. 


376 THE OX. 


Mr Princep of Croxall, and numerous other individuals, ac- 
quired and bred from the Dishley stock; and the rearing of 
bulls for hiring and sale became a distinct branch of the 
profession, by which means the influence of the new breed 
was extended in a surprising degree. The midland counties 
became the great centre, from which it extended beyond the 
limits which the older Long-horns had occupied in the country. 
The effects were beneficial in a high degree. The Dishley 
‘ Breed itself, indeed, has now lost the favour which it once 
possessed ; but the traces of its influence remain in the 
parts of the country in which the Long-horned breed is still 
cultivated. 

The Dishley ‘Breed is of good size, but generally inferior 
in weight to the old Lancashire Long-horns, the Short-horns, 
and Herefords. The horns, for the most part, bend down- 
wards by the side of the head, having more the appearance 
of bent hops than arms of defence. The shoulder is well 
formed, the neck remarkably thin, the head fine, and the 
limbs are moderately short and small boned, in which respect 
the artificial differs from the natural breed. The skin, though 
thick, is soft, and the hair is usually reddish-brown, with more 
or less of white on different parts. The ribs are remarkably 
well arched, forming a fine cylindrical trunk ; the loin is mo- 
derately broad, and the hind quarters are long. The animals 
are docile, easily maintained on ordinary food, and readily 
fattened. The flesh has never entirely lost that darkness of 
_ colour distinctive of the unimproved race, and the fat is less 
' mixed with the muscular parts than in any other kind of 
| British cattle. The tendency of the fat to accumulate on the 


i rump is so great, as to produce a kind of deformity in the 
fattened animal; yet this character might not of itself be 
regarded as an imperfection, were it not indicative of the 
general tendency of the fatty tissue to remain separate from 
the muscular. The fat, too, retains the tinge distinctive of 
the older race ; so that it became a familiar remark of the 
opponents of Bakewell, that breed as he might, he would not 


4 
| 


‘ 
THE LONG-HORNED BREED. 377 


get rid of the black flesh and yellow fat of the Long-horns. bs 
The cows are eminently deficient in their power of yielding ' 
milk.. They are in this respect greatly inferior to the older. 


Long-horns, and are scarcely ever used for the purposes of 
the regular dairy. The character of the beef, and the defi- 
ciency in the females of the power of yielding milk, are the 
most manifest defects of this breed ; and, notwithstanding all 
the care bestowed on the formation of it, few individuals of 
the race are now reared in England for the purpose of graz- 
ing. The breeders of the pure Dishleys confine themselves 
chiefly to the rearing of bulls and cows for the purpose of 


breeding ; and the really beneficial influence of the Stock © 


has been the crossing of the older and coarser kinds yet 
reared in different parts of the country. In this latter respect 


the Dishley stock has been of great economical importance ES 


but the breed itself, in its state of purity, is deficient in the 
really useful properties of a grazing stock. It has been 
questioned whether Bakewell acted with judgment in taking 
the Lancashire Long-horns as the basis of his new breed. 
There is little ground, however, for impugning, on this ac- 
count, the judgment of Bakewell. The Long-horned Breed 
was then regarded as the most valuable in the kingdom ; 
and it was a natural course for an original improver to en- 
deavour to form a Superior one on its basis. The modern 
Herefords were not then called into existence; and the Short- 
horns were a coarse race, of no estimation beyond the limits 
of a few districts. Bakewell, therefore, adopted what must 


have seemed at the time a fitting course ; and no one will — 


deny, that in what he attempted, he sueceeded to the utmost 
extent which the natural characters of the pristine race 


_ allowed. é 
This description of the once celebrated Dishley Breed will’ 


account for the singular fact, that its reputation has passed 


away, even more quickly than it was acquired. It hag given / 


place to other breeds, possessing characters as grazing stock, 
in which it is deficient. A few eminent breeders stil] employ 


378 THE OX. 


themselves in the rearing of bulls, chiefly for exportation to 
Ireland ; but the numbers of the breed reared in England 
are continually diminishing, and the time will probably arrive 
when all that remains of the breed of Dishley will be the 
record of a bold, curious, and interesting experiment. On the 
very farm on which Mr Bakewell’s original experiments were 
instituted and completed, and within many miles around, 


there does not exist a single buli, cow, or steer, of the breed 
which he had cultivated with so much labour. Its history 
forms a singular contrast with that of another race of animals 
which he had formed by similar means, namely, his breed of 
Sheep, which has extended over all the kingdom, and which 
remains established as one of the most important additions 
to the domestic animals of these Islands. 

The history of the breed of Bakewell has shewn, beyond 
anything before attempted, the power of cultivation over the 
form and properties of animals, and has shewn us, too, the 
limits within which the efforts of art must often be confined. 
Bakewell looked to the property of acquiring fatness as the 
essential one to be aimed at in breeding. He acquired for 
his beautiful stock this property in an eminent degree, but 
he acquired it in excess. The fat mingled less with the lean 
than even in the older race, spreading itsélf in a thick layer 
under the skin, and even accumulating in a cushion upon one 
part of the body. “Having painfully, and at much cost,” 
observes an amusing writer, “ raised a variety of cattle, the 
chief merit of which is to make fat, he has apparently laid 
his disciples and successors under the necessity of substi- 
tuting another which will make lean,” Looking to this pro- 
perty of making fat as the sole end to be aimed at, thig emi- 
nent breeder disregarded other properties which, though they 
may be said to be secondary, are yet a necessary element in 
the economical value of a breed of cattle, 


THE SHORT-HORNED BREED. ~ 8379 


XIX._SHORT-HORNED BREED. 


While Ireland and the western parts of England have been 
possessed, for an unknown period, of a race of cattle having ] 
long horns, and furnished with thick skins and abundant hair, 
fitted to protect the animals from long and continued rains, 
the eastern and drier districts towards the German Ocean _ 
have been inhabited by varieties of cattle having thinner q 
skins, shorter hair, and horns comparatively short. In the 
fens of Lincolnshire, and the other tracts of alluvial country 
towards the Wash, the cattle were of great bulk and coarse 
figure, and had usually a dingy colour of the skin, and short 
blunt horns. More inland, and following the course north- 
ward of the Vale of Trent, and thence across the Ouse, 

_ through the central plains of Yorkshire, to the river Tees 
and beyond it, the cattle assumed a less gross and unwieldy 


— 


ee ences 


form, but were still a very tall race, of varied colours, with | | 
. horns of medium length, but which might be termed short 4 | 
| with relation to the same parts in the Long-horned breed. i 


In comparing these varieties of cattle with the races of the 
opposite continent, the large dingy breed of the Fens may 
be compared with the native black cattle of the flats and 
marshes of Holland, and the more varied kinds north of the | 
Humber, with those of Holstein and J utland, whence the | 
finest cattle of the north of Europe have been derived. Ibis | 
not unreasonable to believe, that the latter, during the early 
period of Saxon colonization, may have been brought to the 
country by the Jutes and Angles who settled in this part of | 
England. But however this may be, no other race of cattle, 
except that which may be termed Short or Middle-horned, | 
has ever, within the period of any known records, inhabited } | 
the Fens and north-eastern parts of England. vi 
| But at a long Subsequent period, near our own times, it | 
appears that cattle were frequently brought from the oppo- i] 
site continent, and mingled with the native varieties. They | 


—_ re, “ 


eee ee nee ae 


380 THE OX. 


were chiefly imported from Holland, the Cows of which 
country were the most celebrated of all others in the north 
of Europe, for the abundance of their milk, and their uses 
for the dairy. The earliest importations seem to have been 
made to the country of the Humber, where the port of Hull 
maintained a constant and extended intercourse with Ham- 
burgh and the United Provinces. The Dutch Breed was 
especially established in the district of Holderness, on the 
north side of the estuary of the Humber, whence it extended 
northward through the plains of Yorkshire; and the cattle 
of Holderness still retain the distinct traces of their Dutch 
original, and were long regarded as the finest dairy cows of 
England. Farther to the north, in the fertile district of the 
Tees, importations likewise took place of the cattle of the 
opposite countries, sometimes from Holland, and sometimes, 
by the way of Hamburgh, from Holstein, or other countries 
of the Elbe. Sir William St Quintin of Scampston is said 


_ to have procured bulls and cows from Holland, for the pur- 


pose of breeding, previous to the middle of last century ; and 
at a later period, Mr Michael Dobinson, in the county of 
Durham, visited Holland, for the purpose of selecting bulls 
of the Dutch breed. Other persons had resorted, for their 
breeding cattle, to Holstein, whence the finest of the Dutch 
breeds had themselves been derived. Of the precise extent 
of these early importations we are imperfectly informed ; but 
that they exercised a great influence on the native stock, ap- 
pears from this circumstance, that the breed formed by the 
mixture became familiarly known as the Dutch or Holstein 
Breed, under which names it extended northward ‘through 
Northumberland, and became naturalised in the south of 
Scotland. It was also known ag the Teeswater, or simply 
the Short-horned, Breed. 
Improvers of the Teeswater Short-horns existed early in 
the last century, both in Durham and the neighbouring parts 
of Yorkshire. One of these, Mr Millbank of Barningham, 
was early noted for the excellence of his stock, some records 


att tiaeromrestis. sci 


THE SHORT-HORNED BREED. 381 


of which have come down to us, Shewing the great weight at 
which individual animals from time to time arrived. Mr 
Dobinson, before referred to, became likewise a very success- 
ful breeder ; and various other gentlemen are noted as im- 


provers of the Teeswater Breed, chiefly after the successful | 


experiments of Bakewell had excited a spirit of emulation in 


_ this species of improvement. Up to the period of the Ame- 


rican war, however, the Teeswater Breed had not gained 
greatly in public estimation, beyond the district to which it 
had early extended. Great size seems to have been chiefly 
aimed at by the breeders; and the animals, though valued on 
this account, were of forms comparatively coarse, great con- 


'  sumers of food, and deficient in many of those points which 


are now regarded as essential in a well-formed ox. In the 
qualities of form and disposition to fatten readily, the Short- 
horned Breed fell short of that which Bakewell had already 
perfected in the midland counties, although excelling the 
latter in the quality of the flesh, in the production of inter- 
nal fat or tallow, and in the adaptation of the females to the 
uses of the dairy. ED 

The improvement of the Teeswater Short-horns, however, 
had been continually advancing in the hands of the breeders 
who cultivated it, when Charles and Robert Colling of Dar- 


lington became its ultimate improvers, removing, with admi- ( 


rable skill, the defects which it inherited, and communicating 


\. 
4 


to it properties which it did not before possess. in the same 
degree. These individuals had become considerable farmers ’ 


soon after the year 1770. Mr Charles Colling, the younger 
brother, is justly regarded as the founder of the new breed, 


although his elder brother followed him in his course of en- 


terprise and improvement, step by step. Charles Colling 
cannot, indeed, be compared with Bakewell for boldness and 
originality of design ; but he was greatly more fortunate 
in the selection of a basis for his breed. Colling, like Bake- 
well, seems to have regarded size in his animals as a qua- 
lity secondary and subordinate to those which he wished 


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382 THE OX. 


to communicate, and to have directed almost exclusive at- 
tention to beauty and utility of form, and development of 
the properties of early maturity and facility of fattening. 
Having, by-selection and the skilful conjunction of the best 
individuals for breeding, become possessed of animals with 


| the properties sought for, he continued to breed feom his 


i 
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i 
4 

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| own stock, disregarding affinities of blood; by which means 
| he gave to it the necessary permanence of characters, and 
| that delicacy of form which this system of breeding tends 


to communicate. He adopted the practice of hiring out his 
bulls, by which means he realized a competent fortune, and 
extended the influence of his stock to the districts around 
him. 

The information possessed by us regarding the early-prac- 
tice of Colling, in his course of improvement, is meagre and 
obscure, since he himself manifested a great dislike to throw 


j any light on his views and practice. It is generally believed, 
| that the first radical improvement which he effected on his 


| stock, was through the medium of a young bull, which he 


\ acquired by a kind of chance. This animal is said to have 


been a calf belonging to a poor man who grazed his cow on 


_ the sides of the highway. The calf was purchased from its 


x 


owner by Mr Waistel and Mr Robert Collin g, and soon after- 
wards transferred to Charles, whose sagacity led him to per- 
ceive the value of the young animal. He seems, likewise, to 
have acquired the cow, which, however, on being removed to 
superior pastures, became so fat that she did not again breed. 
The calf inherited the same property, and as he grew up be- 
came so fat as to be useful as a bull only for a short time. 


-f This bull was termed Hubback. He was below the ordinary 


size of the Teeswater cattle, but his points and touch were 
admirable, and he is generally regarded as the father of the 


improved Short-horns. However this may be, Colling, from 
this period, continued to produce many fine bulls, as Petrarch, 
| / Bolingbroke, Favourite, Comet, and others whose names are 
~{ quoted in the pedigrees of the Short-horned Breed, in the 


THE SHORT-HORNED BREED. 383 


Same manner as those of the Darley Arabian, and Godolphin 
Barb, in the case of Horses of the Turf. The properties of 
his stock thus became more and more appreciated through- 
out the district of the Short-horns, and, about the year 1800, 
had begun to extend to distant parts of the country, where 
hitherto the Short-horned Breed had not been cultivated. 
A circumstance, apparently trivial, contributed in a consj- 
derable degree to this result, A fine animal, termed the 
Durham Ox, the son of Favourite by a common cow, was 
sold for public exhibition, and carried in a caravan to all 
parts of the country, He was exhibited in this manner for 
nearly six years, and excited much interest amongst the 
country people. He arrived at great weight, but was chiefly 
remarkable for the fineness of many of his points. When 
killed, after two months’ illness, during which he had lost 
considerably in flesh, he weighed 165 stones 12 Ib., besides 
tallow and offal. 

Colling, by continually breeding from his own stock, seems 
to have pushed refinement in breeding to its limits, and pro- 
bably began to experience that impairment of constitution in 
his animals which never fails to accompany a continued and 
forced intermixture of blood, in a limited number of indi- 
viduals. Whether from this cause, or from a mere desire to 
try experiments, it is understood that he attempted various 
crosses with the cows of other breeds, and chiefly, it is said, 
with the Scotch Highland and the Galloway. The experi- 
ment with thé formér did not succeed, but that with the 
latter led to a remarkable result. Colling procured a fine 
Galloway cow, of a red colour, and this cow was covered by 
one of his best bulls, a grandson of Bolingbroke. The pro- 
duce was a bull-calf, which in due time was conjoined with a, 
fine Short-horned cow, Johanna. The produce of this union 
was likewise a bull-calf, which, in the fitting time, was put to 
another fine Short-horned cow, Lady, from whom has de- 
scended a family termed, in reproach, the Alloy. The family 
of the Alloy, however, has proved not inferior to those of 


— “ : A tn Tae 


ita. 
~The a 
- “ 


384 THE OX. 


what are termed pure blood. At the gale of Mr Colling’s 
stock, which took place in 1810, this cow, Lady, with her 


' descendants, sold at enormous prices, Shewing that, in the 


estimation of the public, the Galloway cross had not impaired 


\ the excellence of the pure stock. Thus it appears, that by 
a single cross with another race, and then by breeding back 


again to the superior one, no injury was sustained ; nay, a 
‘fresh infusion of vigour was probably made into the parent 
stock. Similar results are common in the breeding of horses, 
dogs, and other animals. The proceeding, in the case of 
Colling, was nothing more than a rash experiment, the 
favourable result of which should not diminish the caution of 
breeders, in preserving the purity of a family of animals 
whose characters have been established. . 

The whole of the unrivalled stock of Colling was sold in 
the year 1810. The particulars of this sale have been long 
familiar to the breeders of this country. It is important, as 
a record of the successful result of the experiments of Col- 
ling, of the high estimation in which his stock was held by 
English breeders, and as enumerating the names of animals, 
most of which are continually referred to in the pedigrees of 
the breed.* 


* List of SHortT-HORNED Carrie the property of Charles Colling, Esq., 
sold October 11. 1810. 


COWS. 
ce 83 
4 35 
5. 170 
400 
200 
. Johanna = Do. 130 

“ randson of Lord Bo- 
... Old Phoenix eeseesesseee | es 206 
«+. Lady Favourite 210 
A daughter of the dam 150 
of Phenix 

Daisy e 410 
140 


Names. Out of 


Peeress...... 
Countess .. 
Celina 


Carry forward, 2134 


THE SHORT-HORNED BREED. 385 


Contemporaries and successors of Colling followed the same 
course of improvement. His brother, Mr Robert Colling, 
was very distinguished as a breeder, although his stock did 


SR I ate Ng ce al Be 


COW S—continued. ; cies 
Names. Out of Got by 7 ves as. a 
is Brought forward, 2134 
SC eee Co ee LC See 4 70 
Beauty....., Miss Washington ......,.. Re a rectindSnseverccr en 4 120 
Wed Bese... Wes ces WON Peas 5. dis Grats «83 4 45 
i Se aa eee ae 3 70 
Miss Peggy ............ tt hey. yecasees. A son of Favourite ....... 3 60 
Magdalene.. A heifer by Washington Comet.....0.0.0..000000 077 oe de 
. /7 2669 
y i 
BULLS / 
Names. Age. Out of Got by sa Pe 
era 20. raha Pitomits,.. 5 fog, Favourite.......,.... 1000 
Yarborough ............. 9 Baws eee Tile Lee Dee oe fee ee 55 
Major . goreistioarstanses st & Lictily, sos, fetes SI peti: eee A 200 
Mayduke .............,. 3 Cherry ....., OO aseeh eee pee 145 
BOI oe od once a in Vong: bo” De ae sateen: teks 365 
Northumberland ...... ecissAireinie, 10. 24! Favourite......,..... 80 
Alfred ..... Si 5 Lanse eS ors 2 so yas as mga ies siva7 iki 110 
Le aS Le Team 1 Duchess 00.0.5... DG.” ¥ 71 CORO 4 105 
Alexander ..........., Lal I Te ee DD krees gwen rgb el 63 
| eat etek, 1 Magdalene ........... Favourite;......,..,. 76 
Harold crosses TL Red Rose ......... ..... Windsor ........,... 50 
: 2249 
BULL-CALVES, unprr ONE YEAR OLD. 
Names. Out of Got by Bias 
Betjinte ons. e i. Creriy 55 ig Tao Voniat sti pie re: 50 
Young Favourite ...... Cotintess .ooo........... Ne i chd cate a 140 
Georges. ais baw. Giids tad ibe c. Bits. £ Deriindivgs.~ 130 
Soe ot ae ROTM aionsk shel sa ovis Dies Fiscal 90 
Manone 2. Ak giee 2 SRI Os DO SUNG PsA 15 
co Eat nate ee Beauty ERISCL eee. oe AD Ge be eee Soe 60 
Spent: ~ eee i, A li 2h ay as a eae a 170 
655 
HEIFERS. 
Names. Age. Out of Got by se 
ik I aa 3 Dam by Favourite..... Comet .....600....... 105 
Young Duchess .,.,.. 2 Do, do. ae. NO aaaey Aeacctrnkic, 183 
Nouns dianta.. 3... CN, re ee i SER 101 
Young Countess ....., 2 Countess ............... aig ae ee 206 
Lr ne papain as 2 Dam by Washington.. BE Ee snr esti ieee od 182 
CHAPLOEC® oc. cs oaceress 1 Oathelene,.... inet tt ig aiiete =f 136 
POMPOM: sis OPS es AS POUR og aos. Mbnt Sat ages 35 
898 
HEIFER- 


pln 


. " a 
a eden ae RONNIE eA otk eA EERO NE ceernr ee 


386 THE OX. 


not altogether reach the high reputation at which the other 
had arrived. It was sold, however, in the year 1818, at 
great prices :— 


34 Cows produced the sum of . ; 4141 guineas. 
17 Heifers, : 3 : : : 1287 do. 

6 Bulls, : : : : ‘ 1343 do. 

4 Bull-calves, : , ; j 7113.. -de. 


———. 


61 7484 guineas. 


Up to the present time, the breed of Colling has main- 
tained its early reputation, and extended its influence to 
most parts of the kingdom, where the natural or acquired 
fertility of the country is favourable to its cultivation. It is 
usually termed the Short-horned Breed, but modern breeders 
frequently term it the Durham Breed, as indicating the part 
of the country where it was perfected, and as distinguishing 
it from the older varieties of Short-horns, and the less im- 
proved ones yet existing. It is the practice to preserve and 
record the pedigrees of the animals employed in breeding, 
their descent being usually deduced from the stock of some 
distinguished breeder, and traced, more or less remotely, to 
that of the Collings. Various breeders devote their atten- 
tion exclusively to the rearing of bulls, as was practised by 
Bakewell and the breeders of the Dishley stock ; but innu- 
merable agriculturists, in the ordinary practice of the farm, 
bestow assiduous care on the perfecting of their stock by 
selection and careful culture, so that increasing numbers of 


HEIFER-CALVES, UNDER onE YEAR OLD. 


—BAILEY’S Report on the County of Durham. 


THE SHORT-HORNED BREED. 387 


animals, of the first class, are now every year produced 
throughout the country. 
| . 7 The Durham, or improved Teeswater Breed, differs nearly | 
as much from the older cattle of the Tees, as the Dishley | 
Breed of Long-horns from the older race from which it wag | 
derived. The height is less, but the trunk is more round 
_ and deep; the limbs are shorter in proportion to the depth | 
of body, and the chest, back, and loin, more broad, so that ; : 
| 


sy 
% 


Ee 


with less apparent bulk of body the weight is usually greater. | 
The skin is. light-coloured, and the hair reddish-brown or 
white, either Separate or mixed. The muzzle ig flesh-coloured, 
and rarely black, the ‘ppearance of which colour on the skin 
§ indicates the revival of a character of the older varieties, 
which modern breederg study to exclude. The horns are i | 
shorter than in the former breed, light-coloured, blunt, and | 
sometimes laterally flattened. The skin is soft to the touch, 
; the general form Square and massive, the shoulder upright, 
and the hind-quarter large. The uprightness of the shoulder 
produces a hollowness behind, which does not exist in the 
Same degree in the Devons, the Herefords, and other varie- 
ties allied to them. The uprightness of the shoulder ig re- 
garded as a defect, but it were more correct to say that it is 1 
a character in harmony with the Squareness of form distine- 
tive of the breed. Although Colling preferred cattle of a 
medium size, yet the breed being derived from one of great 
bulk of body, there ig a, constant tendency to the production 
of large animals. The breed communicates its characters \ 
x ; readily to all others, and the first progeny, even with races i 
( é the most dissimilar, 18 usually fine. The females retain, in } 
i a considerable degree, the properties of the Holstein race, 
in yielding a large quantity of milk, in which respect they 
greatly excel the Long-horns, the Herefords, and the Devons. 
In the property of yielding milk, however, the new breed is 
inferior to the older and legs cultivated one, Shewing that 
refinement in breeding, and the greater tendency to produce |—— 
fat, are unfavourable to the secretion of milk. Individual — 


a laa - 
= 


tei i Dn 


388 THE OX. 


cows, indeed, are found to retain the milching properties of 
the older race, but this is an exception to the common re- 
sult. The Oxen are eminently distinguished by the property 
of arriving at early maturity of muscle and fatness. Great 
numbers of them are now disposed of at the age of about 
twenty-four months, in the highest perfection, and of a weight 
at which no other cattle in Europe arrive at the same age. 
This highly cultivated breed, it has been seen, extended 
from the district of the Tees, as from a centre, aS soon as 
its value became known. It quickly spread northward all 
through Durham and Northumberland into the valley of the 
Tweed, and in later years, it had extended northward through 
the eastern lowlands of Scotland to the Pentland Firth, and 
iS now mingling with the native breeds. It soon extended 
southward through Yorkshire, where it was cultivated on the 
largest scale. The district of Holderness, it has been said, 
early obtained cows from Holland, and became distinguished 
beyond any other part of England for the excellence of its 
dairy stock, Many cows of the Holderness variety are yet 
to be found, but generally they have been more or less mixed 
with the Durham blood. The effect has been to improve 
their form, but to impair their milching properties; never- 
theless, the modern Holderness still stands in the first rank 
of dairy cows, and the great London dairies are chiefly sup- 
plied by them. The Durham breed extended likewise across 
the Humber, and was largely mingled with the cattle of Lin- 
colnshire and the neighbouring districts. Individual animals 
are still to be found in the fens, with the clumsy form, dark 
muzzle, and dingy skin, of the former race; but, generally 
speaking, the blood of the improved Teeswaters has been 
more or less infused into all the cattle of this part of Eng- 
land. Further, the breed has extended westward through 
Leicestershire and most of the midland counties, where it 
is either cultivated in a state of purity, or has been so mingled 
with the former breed as to modify or efface the Long-horn 
characters. It has taken root in Lancashire, Westmoreland, 


THE SHORT-HORNED BREED. 389 


and other parts, where the Long-horned Breed had been the 

most firmly established, and it has been carried to the coun- 

ties bordering on Wales, where the breeds allied to the 
_ Devon have been before cultivated. It has passed into the 

drier counties of the Chalk, though in smaller numbers, than 
ee into the central and western counties. It has been trans- | 
ported to Ireland, and, in an incredibly short Space of time, 
has effected a great change in the cattle of the breeding dis- ee 
tricts. Being made to cross the native Long-horns, the first 
progeny is always found to be good, and this effect naturally 
leads the breeders to resort again to the superior race, so 
that after a time the traces of the Long-horns become lost. 
This breed, so highly valued at home, has been carried to 
the Continent of Europe, to the United States of America, 
where it is cultivated with perfect success, and to the brilliant 
colonies of England, now rising to greatness in the Southern : 
| Ocean. 


The multiplication, in this country, of a breed so greatly 
improved by art, must be regarded as highly conducive to 
the improvement of this branch of rural industry. A large 
part of all the cattle of England consists of a mixture of 
races, having no uniformity of characters, and generally de- 
fective in some important points. The possession of a breed 
which can always be resorted to for crossing these mixed 
and defective races, is a great mean of improvement, appli- 
cable to a class of animals that require it the most, causing 
the larger cattle of the country to approach to a better model, 
‘ and assume a greater degree of uniformity. ae 
| Further, the extension of the pure breed, and the muyl- 
tiplication of its numbers, are conducive in a high degree to 

its own permanence and improvement. When but a few 
| cultivators of it were to be found, the system of breeding 
/ from animals of the same family, and from the nearest affi- 
| nities of blood, could Scarcely be avoided by those who wished 


to preserve their stock from deterioration ; but now so many 
fine animals are reared of the same race, that no one is laid 


ee erent ghia Serene treme nein perigee wee 


390 THE OX. 


under the necessity of breeding solely from a few individuals; 
and in the future cultivation of the breed, hardiness, sound- 
ness of constitution, and the milching properties of the females, 
may all receive their due share of attention. The external 
form has been already brought to all the perfection which 
art seems capable of communicating ; and now those other 
properties remain to be attended to, without which no fur- 
ther refinement of breeding will avail for the purposes of 
profit to individuals, and benefit to the country. 


_ The Breeds of British cattle which have been described 
are,— 

1. The Wild or White Forest Breed, derived from a race 
which formerly inhabited, in a state of liberty, the woods of 
the country. -Remains of this remarkable race have been 
preserved for ages in the parks of opulent individuals, where 


the animals, herding and breeding exclusively with one an- 
other, retain the habits of their wild condition. In other 
cases, they have been reared in a state of domestication, 
when they assume the habits and essential characters of 
the common varieties. 

2. The Zetland Breed, of Scandinavian origin, inhabiting 
the remote islands of that hame, and spreading over the 
Orkneys.. These cattle are of diminutive size, but fatten 
readily, and are valued by the consumers. The females ex- 
cel the cattle of the Highlands in the faculty of yielding 
milk. 

3. The Brecils of the Highlands of Scotland, Spreading 
over the primary mountainous tracts of North Britain. These 


See nS 
~y= : 
LOWE an oS nk ED 


cattle are of small size, covered thickly with hair, hardy, and 


suited to a country of heaths and mountains. The finest, 
usually termed the West Highland Breed, are produced in 
the countries on the western coasts, and certain islands of 
the Hebrides, the smallest in the central] Highlands, and the 


THE OX. 391 


largest towards the eastern coasts, in the countries mixing 


with, or bordering on, the plains. These hardy cattle are 
reared 1m vast numbers on the natural herbage of the moun- 
tainous country where they have been indigenous from time 
immemorial, and whence they are transferred, at the guit- 
able age, to be fattened in the lower country. 

4. The Welsh Breeds, somewhat exceeding in size the 
West Highland Breed, and, like it, suited to a country of 
hills and natural herbage. They have dark or orange-yel- 
low skins, and are mostly of a black colour. The finest are 
reared in the county of Pembroke, in the district of Castle- 


_ Martin. 


5. The Kerry Breed, naturalized in the mountains of 
Kerry, but spread over all parts of Ireland. The cattle of 
this breed are of small size, and of various colours, with 
tapering horns. They subsist on Scanty food, and the fe- 
males, yielding milk abundantly, are valued by the poorer 
inhabitants for the dairy. 

6. The Polled Angus Breed, allied, in its essential charac- 
ters, to the cattle of the mountains, but increased in size by 
being naturalized in a country of richer herbage, where arti- 
ficial food can be supplied. This breed has dark skins, and 
is destitute of horns. It has been greatly improved by the 
care of the breeders, and is reared over a considerable tract 
of country. . 

7. The Polled Aberdeenshire Breed, of mixed origin, and 
reared in the lower parts of the county of Aberdeen. 

8. The Galloway Breed, inhabiting a tract of greywacké 
hills in the south-west of Scotland; the cattle of which are 
greatly valued for their hardiness, their adaptation to the 
purposes of the grazier, and the quality of their beef. They 
are carried in great numbers to the pastures of England, 


chiefly of Norfolk, whence they are transferred to the London — 


and other markets. They haye deep bodies, dark skins, and 
are destitute of horns. : . 
9. The Polled Suffolk Breed, cultivated, for an unknown 


392 THE OX. 


period, in Suffolk and the adjoining districts. The indivi- 
duals are of medium size, with defective forms ; but the cows 
are admirable for the quantity of milk which they yield. 
The breed is losing ground continually, from the want of 
care of the breeders, and the effects of crossing. 

10. The Polled Irish Breed, of large size, and well suited 
to the dairy, but much scattered, and merging in the races 
with which it is crossed. . 

11. The Falkland Breed of Fifeshire, apparently derived 
from Holland, inheriting the milching properties of the Dutch 
races, but now nearly extinct in the pure state. 

12. The Alderney Breed, reared in the Norman Islands of 
the Channel, of small size and ungainly form, with short 
crumpled horns, of delicate constitution, and requiring a tem- 
perate climate, but yielding a rich and finely-coloured milk. 
This breed is regularly imported into England, where it is 
kept for the luxury of the opulent, or partially employed in 
the regular dairies of the countries of the Chalk. 

13. The Ayrshire Breed, derived from the county of Ayr, 
but widely spread over the dairy districts of Scotland, and 
extending in considerable numbers to Ireland. This is the 
most numerous breed, cultivated exclusively for the dairy, in 
the British Islands. The individuals are of medium size, 
and of various colours, with short horns. They are capable 
of subsisting on ordinary pastures, and yield a large quan- 
tity of milk in proportion to their size and the food con- 
sumed. 

14. The Devon Breed, naturalized in the higher parts of 
Devonshire, on the Bristol Channel, but spreading’ through 
the lower country. These cattle have orange-yellow skins, 
fine tapering horns, and are of a deep red colour. They are 
of a light and graceful form, agile, and suited for active 
labour. They fatten with sufficient facility on good pastures, 
and in a temperate climate; but they are inferior in hardi- 
ness, and the power of subsisting on scanty herbage, to the 
mountain cattle of Scotland and Wales. They increase in 


THE OX. 3 393 


bulk when naturalized in a lower country, so that the breed 
of South Devon differs in size and aspect from that of the 
higher lands. The females are small, and deficient in the 
power of yielding milk, though the milk which they afford is 
well-coloured and rich in cream. 

15. The Sussex Breed, a variety of the Devon, and inhe- 


‘riting its properties, but of larger size, and less delicate 


form. This breed is now undergoing great improvement, 
but is little sought for, for the purposes of grazing, beyond 
the district in which it is reared. 

16. The Glamorganshire Breed, proper to the county of 
that name, common to the high and low grounds, but only 
brought to perfection in the vale of Glamorgan. This breed 
possesses valuable qualities, and combines well the properties 
of milching and fattening ; but the numbers of the improved 
variety are limited, and circumscribed in their diffusion by 
other breeds more generally cultivated, sie 

17. The Herefordshire Breed, greatly valued for its fat- 
tening properties, and extensively diffused, for the purposes 
of grazing, in the west of England. It has a remote affinity 
with the Devon Breed, and the cows inherit the defect of the 
latter, in being small and imperfectly suited to the dairy. 

18. The Long-horned Breed, from time immemorial Spread 
over Ireland and the western counties of England, still occu- 


pying a great tract of country, both in the mountains and 


plains, and varying in size with the fertility, natural or ac- 


- quired, of the districts in which it has been naturalized. It 


was on the basis of this widely-spread race, that Bakewell 
reared the beautiful Breed of Dishley, which spread over the 
midland counties, and extended its influence by crossing the 


— older and coarser varieties. The Long-horned Breed is now 


giving rapid place to others better suited to the purposes of 
the breeder, the grazier, and the consumer. 
19. The Teeswater Short-horned or Durham Breed, de- 


rived immediately from the district of the Tees, and per- 
fected by Charles and Robert Colling, in the county of Dur- 


a 


394 THE OX. 


ham. This breed is believed to possess a better combination 
of properties than any of the larger cattle yet produced in 
the British Islands, is everywhere extending its limits, and 
superseding the pre-existing breeds, or modifying their cha- 
racters by intermixture. 

To these breeds of British cattle might be added a numerous 
class of mixed character and origin, but which rarely exhibit 
such a uniform class of characters, as to admit of being re- 
garded as true breeds. These mixed races are to be found 
in all parts of the kingdom, and especially in the countries of 

‘the dairy, where individuals are selected for their milching 

properties, without reference to a common origin. It is the 

| effect of a better knowledge of the practice of breeding, and 
of more extended intercourse between different parts of the 
country, to diminish the number of these mixed, and mostly 
inferior, races, by adopting superior modes of breeding. 


ws eM _. ES Na Nicht ee ee ie es 


SAIMESE BREED. - : 


IV. THE HOG. 


Tue Hog Faminy comprehends various species, and, ac- 

cording to the views of modern Zooclogists, several genera. 

“A All the species are allied in the form, temperament, and 
habits of the animals: the face ig prolonged, truncated, and 

terminated by a moveable cartilaginous disc; the skin igs | 

thick ; the body is covered more or less with bristles and i 

hairs ; the neck is strong and muscular ; the limbs are stout 

and short. All the species feed on plants, but especially on 

; roots, which their strong and flexible trunk enables them to 


396 THE HOG. 


grub up from the earth. They devour animal substances, 
but they do not seek to capture other.animals by pursuit. 
Like the thick-skinned animals to which they are allied,— 
the Elephant, the Rhinoceros, the Hippopotamus, and the 
Tapir,—they delight in humid and shadowy places. They 
are voracious, and bold in their own defence, but have nothin g 
of the thirst of blood which distinguishes the carnivorous 
tribes. Their voice is a kind of groan, or grunt, though, — 
when wounded, they utter piercing cries: their senses of 
smell and hearing are eminently acute. 

The species may be divided into two groups, 1sé, Those 
inhabiting the Old Continents ; and, 2d, Those proper to the 
New; namely (1.), The Wild Hogs of Europe, Asia, and 
Africa, the Babiroussa of the Indian Islands, and the Wood 
Swine and Wart-bearing Hogs of Africa; and (2.), The Pec- 
caries of America. 

The WitD Hoe or Wild Boar, Sus aper, is greatly the 
most diffused and important. He can be domesticated with 
| the utmost facility ; and, in a single genefation, his descend- 
| ants relinquish the habits proper to them in the state of 
' nature. 

The BABIROUSSA, Sus babirussa, is found in Sumatra, Java, 
and other Islands of the Eastern Archipelago, and some say 
in the marshes of the Indus. He is of lighter form than the 
common Wild Hog. He is thinly covered with bristly hairs 
of a reddish-brown colour, and he is distinguished by the 
remarkable position of his upper tusks, which, penetrating 
the skin, bend upwards like horns rising from the snout. 
He grunts in the manner of the ¢ommon Swine, but when 
irritated he utters a hoarse growl. These creatures asso- 
ciate in herds, dwelling in the impenetrable marshes of the 
sea-coasts, where they feed on herbs and shell-fish. When 
pursued, they throw themselves into rivers or the sea, and 
swim with ease and swiftness. They are sometimes seen in 
large herds swimming from island to island, or crossing 
the broad estuaries of rivers. It is then that they are 


ee eS — seo ns nmupendapemnmnabeariniendsbisian’ gucpenssidsmmeadipu mar as inupenins a as 


i 


THE HOG. 397 


attacked with spears by the Malays and other natives, from 
canoes, and slain in such numbers that the waters are dyed 
with their blood. The people preserve their skins and fat, 
which last is melted, and used in place of butter or oil. In- 
dividuals are easily tamed, and they could, doubtless, be sub- 
jected in any number to permanent servitude. A male and 


female were brought by the Astrolabe to Paris: the female — 
bred after arriving in Europe, but the progeny perished in | 
the second or third year, of diseased lungs, from the effects . 
of cold; the male lived the usual term, and became very fat, 


feeding and grovelling in the manner of common swine. The 
female used to cover him with straw, and slip underneath the 
litter, so that both remained concealed from view. 

The MASKED AFRICAN Boar, or Wood Swine of the Cape 
Colonists, Sus larvatus, is a native of Madagascar, and the 
south of Africa. He has a larger head and shorter neck 
than the common Swine, and he has a fleshy excrescence on 
each side of the face beneath the eyes, giving him a savage 
and hideous aspect. He dwells in holes which he has ex- 
cavated. He is ferocious, prompt, and swift of foot: he 
does not court a contest with enemies, but, when molested 
in his lonely cavern, he rushes forth upon his assailants 
with resistless fury, snapping their limbs asunder in an in- 


stant, and ripping them up with his for midable tusks. The 
natives say they would as soon encounter a Lion as a Wood. 


Swine. 

Whether these fierce and powerful creatures breed with 
the domestic species is not known. Sparrman states, that he 
saw two of them at the house of a farmer in the province of 
Lange-Kloof perfectly tame. They went down on their knees 
to graze, and changed their posture to that of standing with 
the greatest ease. An individual of this species was sent by 
the Governor of the Cape of Good Hope to the Hague, in 
1763, as a present to the Prince of Orange. He was gentle, 
except when offended, and then his keepers were afraid to 
approach him. But, for the most part, whenever his cage 


i. 
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§ 


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398 THE HOG. 


was opened, he came out in good humour, and frisked gaily 
about in search of food, devouring greedily whatever was 
offered to him. He was pleased to be stroked, and delighted 
in a rough brush. Sometimes, with his tail erect, he would 
amuse himself for hours, pursuing the fallow-deer and other 
animals. On one occasion, being left alone for a few minutes 
in the court-yard, he was found, on the return of the keepers, 
employed in digging the earth. He had made a large exca- 
vation over a sewer, which doubtless he intended to reach. 
It was only by the force of several men that he could be 
made to relinquish his attempt; and then he expressed his 
grief and resentment by uttering a sharp and mournful noise. 

The family of Hogs presents itself also, under a slight 
change of characters, in other parts of Africa, constituting 
the PHACOCHARES, or WART-BEARING Hoes, so named on 
account of certain fleshy prominences and excrescences on 
the face. These creatures appear to be wild and fierce, and 
are armed with tusks of great magnitude, which they use 
with deadly effect when attacked or disturbed in their re- 
treats. It has been supposed that there are two Species ; 
one of which, inhabiting Guinea, the-interior of the Cape, 
and a vast extent of country, is the Phacochwris Africanus, 
Des. ; another, found in Kordofan and Abyssinia, is by some 
believed to be the creature referred to by Alian as the Hog 
with four Horns, and hence has been termed Phacocharis 
4iliani. He has a mane of long bristles extending along 
the back, powerful tusks, and on each of his cheeks two 
fleshy lobes, one larger and one smaller. He is an inhabi- 
tant of forests and bushy tracts, and his principal food, like 
that of others of the family, is vegetable. It is not known 
whether any of the Wart-bearing Hogs have been reduced 
to domestication by the tribes of Africa, or whether they 
breed and form a fruitful progeny with the Common Swine. 

In the New World, the Hog family likewise appears, but 
under a distinct form. It is there represented by two species, 
characterized by a glandular opening in the back, whence the 


THE TOG. 399 


term dicotyles, Signifying a double navel, has been applied to 
the genus. These animals, termed PECCARIES, are smaller 
than the common Swine of Europe, but resemble them in 
their general form. Their canine teeth are Sharp, and capa- 
ble of inflicting severe wounds, but do not curve upwards in 
the manner of tusks. The glandular openings on their backs 
exude a peculiar liquid, the use of which is unknown. They 
are nearly destitute of tail; and are covered with stiff bristles, 
very long upon the neck and Spine, which they erect when 
irritated. They dig the earth with their trunk, and grunt in 
the manner of the common Swine, but make a loud clashing 
with their teeth when alarmed. They are omnivorous, but 
feed chiefly on vegetable Substances : their flesh ig leaner, and 
less delicate than that of the common Swine. They are 
readily tamed, and are pleased with the caresses of those 
with whom they are familiarized. Of the two Species, the 
one, the Collared Peceary, Dicotyles lorquatus, inhabits the 
countries of the Atlantic from Guiana to Paraguay, and is 
found in pairs, or in small numbers together; the other, the 
White-lipped Peccary, Dicotyles labiatus, inhabits nearly the 
Same regions, and congregates in herds. The habits of the 
latter species have been well described by Azara and other 


_ writers. They are eminently gregarious, associating in bands 
of many hundreds: they traverse the country in quest of food, 


unimpeded by the broadest rivers, and making their way 
through the densest thickets, Should the cultivated lands 
of the settler lie in their course, they devastate every field 
that can afford them food, lay waste the inclosures, and 
trample down and devour the growing corn. They defend 


themselves resolutely against the beasts of prey by which 


they are unceasingly assailed. Erecting their long bristles, 
and clashing loudly their teeth, they rush upon their as. 
sailant, and unless he ghal] have escaped to a tree, or saved 


instant. Even the formidable J aguar, it is said, fears to at- 
tack these united hordes. He follows them in silence, and 


400 THE HOG. 


seizing on an individual in the rear, in an instant strikes him 
dead, and then escaping to a tree, waits until the herd, un- 
able to reach their enemy, pass on, leaving their wounded or 
dead companions behind. The Indians shoot them with 
arrows from trees and inaccessible rocks. They are said to 
be under the guidance of a leader, and to take to flight the 
moment he is slain. A singular description of an encounter 
with these creatures is given by M. Schomburgk, in his ac- 
count of his ascent of the river Berbice. While his men 
were employed in cutting a mora tree, information was 
brought that a herd of Indian Hogs was feeding at a little 
distance from the river. All the guns were immediately put 
in requisition, and the party started off in pursuit. M. 
Schomburgk himself first came upon the herd; he found them 
in a muddy pool of water, wallowing and enjoying themselves, 
the younger ones in the centre. When within fifteen yards, 
the sentinel observed him ; his bristles rose, and turning to- 
wards the intruder, he clashed his teeth; but the next 
instant he was prostrate, pierced by the ball of the rifle. 
The traveller graphically describes the bustle, the rush, the 
clashing of the tusks of the herd, which sought security in 
rapid flight in the opposite direction. They were followed 
by the party, and M. Schomburgk himself, having given up 
his arms, remained alone. In a little time he heard a rush- 
ing noise approaching through the thickets, and the well- 
known growl and clashing of teeth left him in no doubt as 
to the cause. The herd had divided, and a part was coming 
directly upon him. He stood alone, unarmed, and had not 
even a knife to defend himself. He knew not how he climbed 
the lower part of a mora tree, when past they rushed, their 


rough bristles erect, and their muzzles almost sweeping the 
ground.. They came and passed, he says, like a whirlwind, 
and before he had recovered his astonishment he heard them 
plunge into the river, to swim to the opposite bank.* These 


* Menageries; Lib. of Ent. Know., vol. iii. 


THE WILD HOG. 401. 


little Hogs do not breed with the common race, and they had 
not been domesticated by the native inhabitants. They are 
far inferior in economical uses to the Swine of Europe, which 
were introduced by the Spaniards, have multiplied wherever 
the European settler has formed his home, and have even 
found their way into the woods, and increased in the state of 
liberty. 

Of all the species of the Hog, the most important, with re- 
lation to his uses, is the Wild Hog, commonly so called. 
This creature, in almost every country which he inhabits, 
Seems to have been captured and enslaved. But we are not 
entitled to say that all the domesticated races of the world 
have the same descent. We are yet too imperfectly ac- 
quainted with the subdued races of the interior of Africa to 
be able to maintain that they are all descended from the 
Wild Hog; and in the countries of the Indian Archipelago 
and the South Seas, it may be that other Species, endowed 
likewise with the faculty of resigning their natural wildness, 
and changing their characters under the influence of domes- 
tication, have been reduced to slavery. Nay, the Wild Hog, 


So called, varies so much in characters as he is an inhabitant. 


of Western Asia and Europe, of Eastern Asia, or of the 
equinoctial parts of Africa, that naturalists have apparently 
. &8 much reason for regarding these races as distinct Species, 
as many other animals which are held to be so. . 
The Wild Hog is the inhabitant of the temperate and 
warmer parts of Asia, Europe, and a great part of Africa, 
His colour varies with age and climate, but in our latitudes 
it is usually a dusky brown, with black spots and streaks, 
His skin is covered with coarse hairs or bristles, but with a 
soft wool intermixed, and with coarser and longer bristles 
upon the neck and Spine, which he erects when in anger. He 
is a very bold and powerful creature, and becomes more fierce 
and indocile with age. He feeds on herbs, and delights in 
roots, which his nice sense of smell and touch enables him to 


2¢ 


AQ2 THE HOG. 


find beneath the surface. He feeds, too, on animal sub- 
stances, as worms and larve, which he finds under ground, 
on the eggs of birds, and on the young of animals, which he 
comes upon in his progress, and even on snakes, which, 
though venomous, he attacks with impunity. He eats, too, 
of carrion, but rarely, and perhaps only when pressed by 
hunger. Like other hoofed animals, he is unfitted to capture 
animals that secure themselves by flight. He dwells in moist 


and shady places, which he quits in search of food when the 
shades of evening fall; and he employs the night in search 
of food, grubbing up the ground in long ridges. He is swift 
of foot, keeping pace for a time with a horse at speed. His 
common pace is a walk or trot, though, when urged, he passes 


into the gallop. He readily descends steep places, notwith- 
standing his bulky form. He bites with prodigious force, 
and inflicts desperate wounds with his sharp and crooked 
tusks. He quickly bleeds to death, so that he is not so tena- 
cious of life as the Bear and some other animals. 
The female carries her young for four months, or sixteen 
:| weeks. She produces a litter once in the year, and in much 
| smaller numbers than when in the domestic state. She is 
‘rarely seen with the male but in the rutting season, which, in 
our latitudes, is in the months of December and January. 
| She suckles her young for several months, and retains them 
for a yet longer time afterwards to protect them. When as- 
sailed, she defends her offspring with Surprising courage, and 
the young reward her cares by a long attachment. She is 
often seen to be followed by several families, forming a troop 
formidable to their assailants, and destructive by their ra- 
vages to the vineyards and cultivated fields. When the 
young have acquired sufficient strength to protect themselves 
from their enemies, they generally assume the solitary habits 
of the race, and dwell apart in the recesses of the forest. 
The male is endowed with the singular instinct of seeking to 
destroy his own young at the birth, as if to prevent too great 


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THE WILD HOG. 403 


an increase of the numbers of his race. The female, con- 
scious of the danger, seeks to conceal herself for a time after 
the young are born. . 

There is something noble in the courage of this powerful 
and solitary creature. All his strength seems to be given 
him for self-defence. He injures no one, unless when dis- 
turbed in his retreat, or in the search of the food which his 
nature leads him to seek. He does not court a combat with 
enemies that thirst for his blood, but for the most part seeks 
to. secure himself by betaking himself to the nearest covert. If 
attacked by savage dogs, he sullenly retreats, turning often 
upon them, and driving them back by his formidable tusks. 
When wearied and tormented, and forced at length to fight 
for his life, he turns‘ on his persecutors, and aims at ven- 
geance. If struck by the spear or ball of his pursuers, he 
has been known to disregard all his ether enemies, and single 
out his destroyer. When pursued by dogs, he rushes fiercely 
upon the foremost and strongest, maiming and killing num- 
bers of the pack in an incredibly short time. In like manner, 
he dashes upon the foremost horseman, overthrowing the 
horse and rider in a moment, | 

The hunting of the Wild Hog has been, from early times, 
a sylvan sport familiar to the people of Asia and Europe. 
The classic writers of Greece and Rome abound with allu- 
sions to the chase of this dangerous creature. _ Homer, the 
magic of whose genius carries us back through thirty cen- 
turies to the homes and feelings of the rustic warriors ef his 
country, refers to the grisly tenant of the woods in a multitude 
of passages that live in the memory of every scholar. Later 
writers inform us, that the practice was to hunt him with 
large dogs, to encounter him with spears or javelins, and 
sometimes, it would seem, to drive him into nets or pallisades, 


in the manner pursued in Europe until our own times. Dur- 


ing the middle ages, we have numerous accounts of the hunt- 
ing of the Wild Boar. In England, the rude Anglo-Saxons 
brought to their new country the fondness for this: sport 


404 THE HOG, 


which they had acquired in their native forests; and our 


chroniclers and early writers describe the arms employed, 
which seem to have been chiefly the boar-spear, and power- 
ful dogs trained to the chase. The animals, however, became 
gradually thinned in numbers by the persecution to which 
they were subjected ; and the Norman invaders endeavoured 
to protect them, by their numerous forest laws, against the 
encroachments of the people. A law of William the First 
enacts, that any one found guilty of killing a Wild Boar shall 
have his eyes put out, and other savage enactments are on 
record for preserving this and other beasts of venery. The 
Wild Hogs continued for some centuries after the Norman 
conquest to linger in the woods of Scotland and England, and 
many places in both kingdoms retain names derived from re- 
miniscences connected with their existence, and the heraldic 
devices of illustrious families record the valour used in their 
destruction. Fitzstephen, who wrote in the latter part of 
the 12th century, in the reign of Henry II., informs us, that 
Wild Boars abounded, together with Wolves, Wild Bulls, 
and other game, in the great forests surrounding London ; 
and we learn from the Scottish writers their existence in the 
woods of Caledon. The precise period of their disappearance 
in Britain has not been determined. Charles I. endeavoured 
to restore the race in the New Forest, but all the animals he 
turned loose for this purpose were destroyed during the civil 
wars. 

But the forests of other countries of Europe, as of Russia, 
Poland, Germany, and Spain, yet contain the Wild Hog, along 
with his perpetual enemy the Wolf. He is killed by fire- 
arms, or destroyed by the ancient methods of the boar-spear, 
and pursuit of hounds. ‘The Germans, in an especial degree, 
have retained their fondness for this exercise ; but it is solely 
the occupation of the Lords of the soil, whose rights of chase 
are guarded by rigorous laws. Sometimes the animals are 
butthered in great numbers together: they are driven into 
enclosed spaces in the woods, by surrounding their places of 


THE WILD HOG. 405 


retreat, when, as they issue forth, terrified by shouts and 
clamour, they are killed by fire-arms and spears. 

But the most animating accounts we possess of the modern 
hunting of the Wild Boar are from our countrymen in the 
Hast, where the gallantry and address of the youthful hunters 
may perhaps console us for the shedding of the blood of ani- 
mals so unoffending, and so brave in their own defence. The 
Hogs inhabit the thick jungles of the country, which men 
and horses cannot penetrate ; but often they quit these im- 


penetrable coverts, either driven by the periodical firing of: 


the jungle-grass, or proceeding in search of food into the 


_ plantations of sugar-canes, and the tields of rice, or of rhur 


(a kind of legume, growing from four to six feet high), which 


are often of great extent, or into the patches of long grasses, _ 


several feet high, which are found in these countries of rich 
vegetation. In such cages the game is to be dislodged, which, 
im the cane plantations, is done by numerous natives with 
Staves or poles, drums, and other instruments, marching in 
lines; and in other cases by the huntsmen themselves, on 
horseback, entering with their attendants the ground where 
the quarry is supposed to lodge. Elephants are likewise 
employed in this sport, in which Tigers may be dislodged 
from their retreats. The Hog, being forced from his cover, 
is followed by several horsemen with spears, which they use 
in the manner of javeling, They pursue the animal at speed 
as he makes his way to the nearest cover, darting their spears 
into his body as they come up to him. “Those horsemen,” 
says Captain Williamson, “who are posted at the nearest 
corners, should gallop round to watch for the Hog passing 
on, and giving the halloo, should dash at him at full speed, 
Spearing as they come up. Some Hogs, however, are aware 
of the scheme, having been hunted before: many may be 
seen with large scars, evidently the result of wounds received 
on former occasions; and such are extremely difficult to deal 
with. They will break the line repeatedly, ripping all they 
meet, and eventually creating such terror as effectually to 


406 THE HOG. 


discourage the beaters, who thence get into groups, and, 
though they continue their vociferation, act so timorously, as 
to render it expedient to withdraw them for the purpose of 
trying a fresh cover. It is very common to see ploughs at 
work at the very edge of the canes where the villagers are 
beating for Hogs; and, as the bullocks employed are ex- 
tremely skittish and wild, it rarely happens but, on the Hog’s 
debit, they take fright and run off with the plough, which is 
often broken to pieces. The ploughman, alarmed equally 
with his cattle, also takes to flight, as do all the peasants 
who may see the bristling animal galloping from his haunt.” * 

Mr Johnston, in his Indian Field-sports, gives us spirited 
accounts of the danger and excitation of this kind of chase. 
“ It is difficult,” says he, “to imagine or express the anxiety a 
keen sportsman feels when sitting on his horse near a sugar- 
cane, hearing the beaters calling out burrah suer (a large 
Boar), and perhaps at the same instant hearing his grunt, 
and the crashing of the cane, as he dashes on before them 
through it, expecting every moment to see him come out. I 
have often been thus situated, and have trembled all over as 
if I were in a fit of ague, which did not arise from fear, but 
from extreme anxiety, which went off the moment the Hog 
made his appearance. When a Hog has proceeded to what 
is considered a sufficient distance from a cane, the nearest 
hunter should follow at a good rate, and, when he is off about 
a quarter of a mile, should put his horse out at full speed, 
pressing him as much as possible, observing minutely his 
motions. If he slacken his pace suddenly, he is probably 
waiting for an opportunity of making a desperate charge at 
the horse, and if he be in wind, it would be hazardous to 
withstand his charge ; but if the hunter is determined to push 
on and spear him, which is often necessary near a heavy 
cover, by understanding and observing his manceuvres, he 
will be prepared for the charge. If the country is open and 


* Williamson’s Oriental Field-Sports. 


ah anal 


eer ree eeeenemeaneseeineasnemnsetie 


Sa a RAB we ar ner RAIN to actly agus 


THE WILD HOG. ADF 


clear, I think it is more prudent to draw in the horse, slacken- 
ing his pace agreeably to the Hog’s, keeping nearly at the 
Same distance from him as before he shewed signs of hos- 
tility. When he finds the horse does not come on as he ex- 
pected, he will be induced to increase his Speed again, and 
will soon be out of wind, and allow the hunter to ride up near 
him without preparing to charge. Now, however, the hun- 
ter should dash on at full speed, and as soon as he arrives 
within a proper distance he should deliver his spear, and 
having done so turn his horse instantly off to the left. If 
other gentlemen are following, the nearest to the first should 
keep immediately behind him, to take his place when he has 
delivered his spear.” : 

The same writer describes another scene eminently cha- 
racteristic of the desperate fierceness and strength of the 
animal. He was one, he informs us, of a party of eight 
gentlemen on a sporting excursion, near the city of Patna, on 
the banks of the Soane river. Returning one morning from 
shooting, they met with a very large Boar in a rhur, which 
they did not fire at or molest, as several of the party were 
fond of hunting, and they had no spears with them. The 
next morning they all sallied forth in search of him, and, just 
as they arrived at the spot where they saw him the day be- 
fore, they discovered him at some distance trotting off to- 
wards a grass jungle on the banks of the river : they pressed 
their horses as fast as possible, and were nearly up with him, 
when he disappeared all at once : the horses were then nearly 
at their full speed, and four of them could not be pulled up 
in time to prevent their going into a deep branch of the river, 


the banks of which were at least fourteen or fifteen feet high: — 


happily for them there was no water in it, or any thing but 
fine sand, and no person was hurt. One of the horses which 


_ was very Vicious got loose, attacked the others, and obliged 


all the gentlemen to quit them and walk to their tents. A 
few days afterwards they went again early in the morning in 


pursuit of the same Hog, and found him further off from the 


- 408 THE HOG. 


grass jungle in a rhur field, from which with much difficulty 


‘they drove him into a plain, where he stood at bay, challeng- 
ing the whole party, boldly charging every horse that came 
within fifty yards of him, grunting loudly as he advanced. 
“ The horse I rode,” says Mr Johnston, “ would not go near 
him, and when I was at a considerable distance off, he charged 
another horse with such ferocity, that mine reared and plunged 
in such a violent manner as to throw me off: two or three 
others were dismounted nearly at the same time; and al- 
though there were many horses present that had been long 
accustomed to the sport, not one of them would stand his 
charges ; he “fairly drove the whole party off the field, and 
gently trotted on to the grass jungle (foaming and grinding 
his tusks), through which it was impossible to follow or drive 
him.” * 

These anecdotes of the habits, the courage, and strength, 
of this wild and solitary creature, are interesting as facts of 
natural history, and likewise physiologically, as shewing the 
vast change which domestication produces on his character: 
and not more remarkable is the’ difference in the conditions 
of liberty and subjection in the case of this animal, than the 
veadiness with which he yields up his natural instincts, and 
resigns himself to bondage. If the wild pigs be taken young 
from their mothers in the woods, they become nearly as do- 
cile as the domesticated races, and in a single generation all 
the fierceness which distinguished the parents islost. Their 
very form becomes changed, and those characters which fit 
them for a state of liberty disappear, as if in obedience to 
some natural law. 

When the Wild Hog is subjected to domestication, these 
changes, amongst others, take place: The ears, not being 
required to collect distant sounds, become less moveable: 
the formidable tusks of the male, no longer needed for self- 
defence, diminish : the muscles of the neck, not being exer- 


* * Johnston’s Indian Field-Sports, 


$$ NTN 


THE HOG. 409 


cised in the same degree ag in the natural state, become less 


developed, and the head becomes more prone: the back and — 


loins become more long, the body is rendered more capacious, 
and the limbs become shorter and less muscular: and ana- 


tomy shews that the stomach and intestinal canal have ex-* 


tended. With the enlargement of the trunk, the animals be- 
come less suited for active motion, and, along with the form of 


their bodies, their habits and instincts change. They are more 


insatiate of food, and the tendency to obesity increases. They 


become diurnal in their habits, and so do not choose the night 


for their search of food. The male no longer seeks to dwell 
secluded from his fellows, and the female brings forth her 
young more frequently, and in greater numbers. With the 
diminished strength and power of active motion, the desire 


~ of liberty leaves them: they become content to grovel in the 


sty, and to return to it after a few hours of freedom. The 
creature that would have rushed on the armed horseman, and 
laid prostrate the fiercest dogs, now flees from the swine- 
herd’s cur, and yields obedience to the voice of a child. Nay 
more, they communicate their change of form, appetites, and 
habits, to their progeny; and a new race of creatures, .in 
truth, is formed, suited to a new condition. Nor is it certain 
that the animals ever revert to their former state. At least, 
when the domestication has continued for a long time, asin the 


case of the common Swine of Europe, the tendency to return | 


trent” 


ees 


tee RENNER 


to the ancient type proceeds with a degree of slowness which 


isimperceptible. Many of the Swine of South America carried ¢ 


thither by the Spaniards have escaped into the woods, but | 
they have not become Wild Hogs, but remain in herds. In ' 


the woods of Sweden and Norway, where pigs are allowed 


to roam at large, they are troublesome, and even dangerous 


distinguished from the parent race. In the North Highlands 
of Scotland the pigs are left almost in the state of nature, 
being suffered to graze on the hills like sheep, and to search 
undisturbed for their food; yet these creatures, although 


' to be met with, but they remain together, and are easy to be © 


410 THE HOG. 


they acquire a certain wild and grisly aspect, never reassume 
the true characters of the Wild Hog. They remain grega- 
rious, the male continuing with the herd, and never betaking 
himself to his solitary lair: they are somewhat more wild 
and agile than the breeds of the lower country, but they never 
regain the swiftness, the strength, and the courage of the 
parent stock. 

Of the causes which produce this adaptation of the animal 
to a new condition, one may be believed to be the difference 
in the nature and supplies of aliment. 

When the Hog is brought from the wild to the domestic 
state, food is supplied to him in larger quantity than he is 
enabled to procure in his natural condition. This produces 
an enlargement of certain parts of the body ; but the increase 
of size in one part of the body necessarily implies a corres- 
ponding modification in others. Thus, when the supplies of 
food are increased, the size of the stomach and intestinal 
canal, and consequently of the abdominal cavity, becomes 
extended ; and this is indicated by a prolongation of the back, 
and enlargement of the capacity of the trunk. To support 
this increased volume, the limbs are placed at a greater la- 
teral distance from one another. The tendency to secretion 
of fat increases in a greater proportion than the tendency to 
_ the production of muscle and bone. With these changes the 
animal becomes less fitted for active motion, and the exercise 
of his powers of self-defence ; and not only do those changes 
take place in the individual, but he communicates them to 
his progeny, and thus a form acquired becomes permanent in 
the race. 

Nor are the changes which thus occur in the form and 
characters of this animal, from alteration in the conditions in 
which he is placed, of a slight or Superficial kind. They are 
often as great in degree as those employed to distinguish 
Species ; and if we were to apply the term Species to indicate 
differences of form alone, we might say that the Domesticated 
Hog was specifically distinct from the Wild one. The num- 


THE HOG. 41k 


ber of teeth, regarded as the most constant of characters in 
the discrimination of species, and constantly employed in 


classification, varies with the external agents which affect | 
the animals. In the wild state, the Hog has six incisor | 


teeth in the upper, and six in the lower jaw; but, under the | 


effects of domestication, the number is reduced to three in | 


each jaw, and this number is not constant. The vertebree of 
the back vary from fourteen to fifteen in number, the lumbar 
from four or five to six, the sacral from four to six, the caudal 


from twenty-three to three or four, the tail being often rudi- / 


mental in the domesticated races. 

From the earliest times the Hog has been subjected to 
domestication ; and his flesh has furnished food to the inhabi- 
tants of Europe, and other regions of the Old Continents, 


- beyond all the records of tradition and history. By most of 


the ancient nations his flesh was in great estimation, but by 
others it was held in the utmost abhorrence. The Egyptians 
not only abstained from the flesh of the Hog, but regarded 
the very touch of the living animals as pollution, and the 
persons employed in tending them as degraded outcasts. 
The same feeling was entertained by the Hindoos, from 
whom the Egyptians appear to have derived a part of their 
arts and religious observances. 

In the marvellous Commonwealth of Moses, a like absti- 
nence from the flesh of the Hog was enjoined upon all the 
people of Israel. The Levitical code upon this subject is 
precise: and in the precepts, warnings, and threatenings of 
the Prophets, the use of swine’s flesh is denounced as a 
breach of the law, and an abomination in the sight of God. 
The Jews were not even permitted to offer this detested 
creature as a victim of the sacrifice, as the Egyptians were 
allowed to do, and as the Greeks, Romans, and other people 
practised. The sacrifice of the Hog is declared to be an 
abomination to the Lord, and is compared in the degree of 
guilt with the killing of a human victim, or the immolation 
of a dog. To precepts so clear, and denunciations so ter- 


———————————————— 


* 


412 THE HOG, 


rible, is to be ascribed that unconquerable aversion to the 
unclean beast which the Jewish people came at length to 
entertain to such a degree, that they would not even pro- 
‘nounce its name; and no example, mockery, or persecution, 
ever brought them to adopt the usages of other nations in 
this respect. Yet it is known that great numbers of Hogs 
were reared in the country of the J ews, probably for the 
uses of the strangers who dwelt amongst them, or for the 
purposes of traffic with the neighbouring countries. But even 
now, when all the glory of their beloved land is but to them 
a splendid vision,—when their altars and tabernacles have 
mouldered into dust with the temples of the idolators and the 
palaces of their tyrants,—when nearly twenty centuries have 
Seen them scattered like chaff over every land,—the humblest 
mendicant that boasts the blood of J acob would not pollute 
his lips with the food which his forefathers held it impious 
to taste. | 

Writers have laboured to explain the*reason of this re- 
markable prohibition against the use of an aliment so whole- 
Some and nutritious as the flesh of the Hog. One writer 
will have it, that it was owing to the filthiness of the animal, 
and the impurity of his food, the law carefully providing 
against all filth in the fields, the camp, or in cities :* another 
maintains that it was a lesson to the J ews to abstain from 
the sensuality and grossness of which this animal was typi- 
cal.t Tacitus informs us, that the J ews abstained from it in 
consequence of a leprosy by which they formerly suffered, 
and to which the animal itself was Subject ; and the common 
opinion is, that the use of Swine’s flesh is calculated to pro- 
duce that leprosy to which it ig known the inhabitants of 
Palestine, and the neighbouring countries, including Egypt, 
were subject. To this has been attributed the rigid inter- 
diction of its flesh for food by the Egyptians and J ews. It 
may be doubted if any of these reasons are good with regard 


* Maimonides, More Nevochim. } Lactantius, Inst. 


on 


THE HOG. 413 


to the latter people. It is more safe to assume, that the 
prohibition of the use of swine’s flesh was a law, of whose 
ultimate purposes we are ignorant, connected with the cere- 
monial system of the Jewish ritual. We can no more know 
why the Hog was prohibited than other animals, as the Hare, 


_ whose habits are in no degree unclean, and whose flesh has 


never been supposed to produce leprosy, or other maladies of 
the country. 


Mohammed, in imitation probably of the Jews, or in com- ; 


pliance with prejudices existing in his own country, inter- 


dicted, in like manner, the flesh of the Hog to his disciples ; 


and Mobammedans observe the law of the Prophet in every 
country, however suitable for this species of food. Here 
there is no Divine ordinance promulgated for purposes which 
to us are unknown; but the art of an impostor has prevailed 
against the common sense of mankind, in a matter affecting 
the means of comfortable subsistence throughout a great 
part of the habitable world. 

The flesh of the Hog is nutritive and wholesome, and it is 
an error to suppose that it is more unsuited to warmer coun- 
tries than any other species of animal food. On the con- 


trary, this kind of flesh seems peculiarly suited to the warmer | 


countries. It is in them that the animal arrives naturally 
at his greatest perfection of form, and his flesh at its greatest 
delicacy and excellence. It is the principal animal food 
made use of by the Chinese, and by the people of the hottest 
islands of the Indian Archipelago, and it is used by the 
Negroes all over the burning regions which they inhabit. 
The practice of Europeans, who reside in the warmest parts 
of the Old and New Continents, shews, that not only is the 
flesh of the Hog not unsuited to the warmer countries, but 
that it is the best and wholesomest animal food that can be 
used. That it is the cause of leprosy, is not in accordance 
with effects observed. The Egyptians and Jews, who ab- 
stained from this food altogether, were the greatest victims of 


414. THR HOG. 


leprosy, while the people of the same countries who now feed 
upon it, are comparatively exempt from that terrible malady. 

All the older nations of Europe made large use of the flesh 
of the Hog. The Greeks fed much upon it, as innumerable 
references in their writings testify. To the Romans it afford- 
ed a large part of the food of the people. So much attention 
did the Romans pay to the rearing of the Hog, that their 
writers describe it as a branch of rural economy, under the 
term porculatio. They carried their fondness for this Species 
of food to excess in their modes of preparing it for use; and 
numerous ordinances of the censors were passed against the 
supposed abuse. These rigid monitors prohibited the use of 
certain parts of the animal at festivals and repasts, as the 
mamme, the glands, the muzzle; but no laws could check 
the brutal gluttony of the Roman people. To produce a dis- 
eased state of the liver, they fed the animal on dried figs, 
and then killed him by repletion with honeyed wine.* It 
was their custom to torture the animal to death, that a higher 
flavour might be given to his flesh. In the days of the Em- 
perors, the dish called Porcus Trojanus became so extrava- 
gant with relation to expense, that Sumptuary laws were 
passed to restrain the cost. This dish consisted of a Hog 
roasted whole, stuffed with animals of al] kinds,—beceaficoes, 
thrushes, larks, nightingales, oysters,—bathed with the rich- 
est wines and gravies. The laws sought to restrain the ex- 
cess of expense, but they could not cure the corruption of 
manners, which called for brutal banquets without regard to 
animal suffering. 

The Hog; in the state of domestication, has Spread over 
nearly all the world without the polar circles. He was not, 


however, indigenous to America, though he was carried 
thither by the earliest voyagers, and has now multiplied 
throughout the continent, wherever the descendants of Euro- 


* Plinii Historia Naturalis, Lib. viii. 


THE HOG. 415 


. peans are found. Neither was he found in New Holland, 
| though now he has been transported thither, and finds a 
. habitat as suitable as any other on the globe. This univer- 
sal diffusion seems due to the remarkable fecundity of the 
animal in the domestic state, his easy maintenance, and his 
adaptation to almost every situation. Even in the wild state 
the female is prolific, but this faculty increases in a remark- 
able degree in the state of slavery. The Sow frequently | aoe | 
gives birth to fifteen, to twenty, nay, sometimes she has been | . 
known to produce upwards of thirty at a birth, although she | | 
has not mamme to nourish such a number. She ig compa- . 
ratively a long-lived animal, living to the age of twenty 
years or more: she is ready to receive the male before she 
_ has reached the age of twelve months, and of giving birth to 
) two litters in the year, or even to five litters in two years. 
. M. Vauban, the great military engineer, made, long ago; a 
calculation of the possible produce of an ordinary Sow in 
ten years. He allows twelve at a litter, and excludes from 
his calculation the males, which yet would be as numerous 
as the females. The result is, that, in eleven years, which | iy 
is equivalent to ten generations, there would be 6,434,838 ; | 
pigs, or taking round numbers, six millions of pigs, which | 
is about the number existing in France. Were we to ex- 
tend our calculation, says M. Vauban, to the twelfth gene- 
ration, we should find as great a number to result as all 
~ Europe is capable of maintaining ; and were the calculation 
extended to the sixteenth generation, there would be as great 
4 a number as would people the whole globe. With powers of - 
| production so great as this animal possesses, it will appear 
that, let the consumption be ever so great, the largest means 
-. will exist of Supplying it. Let us contrast this vast power 
of increase with that of another of the Pachydermata, the 
Elephant, and we cannot fail to discover a law of beneficent 
| design. This vast creature might be made to overrun the 
/ whole earth, were not his reproductive powers limited. The 
female brings forth only once in several years, and only one [-—— 


i rene 


a 


416 THE HOG, 


at a birth ; and in the state of slavery, the male refuses to 
propagate at all, or does so with the utmost rarity and re- 
pugnance. An instinct which we may well call divine, seems 
to prompt him not to produce a progeny of slaves, whose 
strength and sagacity might administer to the most destruc- 
tive passions of the human race. 
The learned and ingenious Buffon, in his history of the 
Hog, both in the reclaimed and wild state, describes it as 
being the rudest of all quadrupeds, and as forming, even in 
the conformation of its body, a kind of anomaly amongst 
brutes. The imperfections of its form, says he, seem to 
influence its dispositions ; all its habits are gross, all its 
tastes unclean; all its sensations reduce themselves to a 


furious luxury and brutal gluttony, which makes it devour 


every thing that presents itself, even its own progeny. Its 
voracity seems to depend on the continual necessity it is under 
of filling the capacity of its large stomach, and the gross- 
ness of its appetites on the dulness of its senses of taste and 
touch. The roughness of the hair, the hardness of the skin, 
and thickness of the fat, render the animal little sensible to 
blows, and mice have been seen to lodge in its back, and eat 
its fat and skin, without its appearing to feel it. « Its body 
is as unshapely as its physiognomy is stupid ; its neck is so 
thick and short, that its head almost touches its shoulders : 
its forelegs are so short, that it seems forced to lower its 
head in order to support itself upon its feet, and all its body 
seems as if it were about to fall forward. No ease appears 
in its motions; no suppleness in its limbs, which it scarcely 
bends in order to carry itself in advance. Even in its mo- 
ments of greatest fury, it has always a dull and constrained 
attitude ; it strikes, thrusts, and tears with its tusks, but 
always without agility and address, without the power of 
being able to raise its head, or to bend its body like other 
quadrupeds.” These are the remarks of a writer whose elo- 
quence never fails to charm, even when his arguments the 
least satisfy the judgment. 


4 


THE HOG. oo 


But the Hog, in its conformation, presents no anomaly, as 
our -eloquent naturalist assumes, but is one of the links or 
reticulations by which all the forms of animated beings are 
connected. He is one of the pachydermatous or thick-skin- 


ned animals, of which the existing genera are the Elephant, 


the Hippopotamus, the Rhinoceros, the Hyrax, the Tapir, the 
Hog. But while these types of many species alone remain, 
it appears that, in a former condition of this planet, ere Man 
himself was called into existence by his Creator, the Pachy- 
dermata were numerous, and formed a large proportion of 
the animated inhabitants of the earth. Their bones remain 
in vast numbers, but entire families of them have altogether 
ceased to exist. From the form of their teeth, it appears 
that they were herbivorous, and those the most nearly allied 
to the Hogs seem to have frequented vast rivers or fresh- 
water marshes. While these creatures inhabited the earth, 
the ruminating tribes, in which are comprehended the Sheep, 
the Ox, the Deer, were comparatively rare; but as countless 
periods rolled on, and the earth became suited for a new 
order of life, shall we say for the habitation of the last of 
created beings, Man, the number of the pachydermatous 
tribes diminished, and the ruminating, so essential to man- 
kind, took their place. The huge Mastodons, Tapirs, and 
gigantic Hogs, or creatures resembling Hogs, though re- 
quired to consume the abundant herbs of a then prolific earth, 
were not, we may infer, adapted to the present condition of 
the world and its inhabitants ; and therefore, we may be- 
lieve they ceased to exist. Of these tribes, the few genera 
that have been enumerated alone remain, and the number 
and productiveness of each seem to be adjusted on the nicest 
balance to the order of things which an Omnipotent Proyi- 
dence has ordained, The Elephant, which once Spread in 
countless herds to the Polar Circles, is now confined to the 
woods of the Tropics; the Rhinoceros, yet more rare, is 


limited to the hottest regions of India and Africa ; the Hip- 
popotamus, one of the hugest of living quadrupeds, is con- 


eb) 


418 THE HOG. 


fined to the larger rivers of Africa, where he passes his harm- 
less life under the waters ; and the Tapir, a creature inter- 
mediate between the Pig and the Elephant, merely lingers 
in some of the forests of intertropical countries. But the 
Hog,—the contemned and misshapen glutton, the lowest of 
brutes, and an anomaly amongst his fellows,—survives the 
revolutions of thousands of ages, and is reproduced in count- 
less multitudes in every region of the earth. Let us consider 
how far his form is imperfect, and how far he merits the 
obloquy which is cast upon the habitudes and instincts with 
which Nature has endowed him. 

The Hog, we have seen, is chiefly herbivorous in his state 
of nature, or, at least, he does not prey upon animals that fly 
from him, and much of his food consists of the roots of plants, 
and the worms and larve which he finds under ground. To 
fit him for grubbing up this kind of food, the spinous pro- 
cesses of the vertebre of the neck and back are of great size 
and strength, and large muscles attached to them and the 
cranium, give a prodigious power to the neck, whose strength 
is further increased by its shortness and little flexibility. 
His fore limbs are short, and his face is prolonged, that, in 
digging, he may reach below the plane of the surface on 
which he stands; his face is wedge-shaped, that it may the 
better penetrate the ground, and terminates in a moveable 
dise of strong cartilage, furnished largely with nerves to give 
it sensibility. The eyes are small and sunk, that, when the 
animal rushes through thick coverts of brushwood, they may 
not be lacerated ; and, as a further defence to the eyes when 
the animal rushes through woods, the tusks of the male curve 
upwards before the orbits. The height and strength of his 
haunch and limbs enable him to throw forward his body with 
vast force; and his tusks are so placed that he can inflict despe- 
rate wounds, by bringing them underneath his enemy, and tear- 
ing or ripping him; and his strong jaws enable him to seize ob- 
jects with such force, that the bite of no animal is more danger- 
ous. So far is he from manifesting want of address in his modes 


THE HOG. AIQ 


of attack and defence, that both are precisely those in which 


che is enabled to employ his natural weapons with the surest 
effect.. And with respect to his want of speed, it is seen that 


‘it suffices for the purposes of his own safety, enabling him to 


outstrip for a space the beasts of prey that are his assailants. 
‘When the Hog is described as a creature of gross habits and 
unclean tastes, as haying the senses of touch and taste obtuse, 
and as being so insensible that mice may burrow in his fat 
without his seeming to feel, and so forth, we must see that 
this is not.the description of an animal as he has been formed 
‘by nature, but as he is measured by some standard of our 
‘own. We cannot say that he is unclean, because Nature has 
furnished him with powerful organs of digestion, which enable 
him to derive nourishment from so many substances ; and with 
respect.to his voracity, what is this but the result of the ex- 
tent and perfection of his digestive and respiratory organs ? 
We cannot: know what his sensations of taste are, but have — 
no reason to conclude with M. Buffon that they are obtuse. 
The dulness of his sense of touch is inferred from. the exist- 
ence of the thick layer of fat which envelopes his body ; but 
the plexus of nerves which give sensibility to the skin, is ex- 
terior to this fatty layer, and is not affected by it. The skin | 
of the Hog is far from being insensible. He suffers under 
the irritation of gnats and other insects, and endeavours to 
protect himself from their persecution by rolling in moist 
places, and covering himself with mud. He feels blows 
acutely, and manifestg his suffering by loud cries ; and, with 


~ respect to the burrowing of mice in his fat, this can scarcely: 


but be a fable, though vouched for by Varro, and handed 
down as truth from writer to writer for 1800 years. : 

However Srovelling and mean may appear the habits of 
the Hog, when reduced to the degradation of slavery, yet he 
is not destitute of Sagacity, nor unsusceptible of attachment. 
When he lives in the cabin of the peasant, he loses much of 
his rudeness, suffers himself to be caressed, and recognises 
his protectors. Instances are known in which the Hog, for 


490) THE HOG. 


the purposes of exhibition, has been brought to perform a 
number of feats, displaying a marvellous degree of docility. 
An instance, often quoted, of the degree of education of which 
he is susceptible, is the case of a Sow which came into the 
_ possession of Sir Henry Mildmay, which had been trained by 
a gamekeeper to point at game in the manner of a pointer. 
She was of the New Forest Breed, exquisite in her sense of 
smell, delighting in the sport, and nearly as steady as the 
best trained pointers. Colonel Thornton had a Hog trained 
in like manner to point at snipes and other game. 
Intractable, rapacious, and selfish, as we are wont to es- 
teem this animal, no mother is more tender of her young 
than the Sow, or more resolute in their defence. When the 
young are born, it is interesting to see the little creatures 
make their way to the head of the prostrate parent, to caress 
her and soothe her, as it-were, for the pains they have caused 
her. Instances indeed do occur, though rarely, and never, it 
may believed, in the state of nature, in which the mother de- 
vours her young as soon as they are born. We cannot ac- 
count for an act so revolting, though it may not unreasonably 
be ascribed to pain and irritation, arising from the unnatural 
and confined situation in which the animal ig kept, in filthy — 
pens, and amid disturbance of every kind. It is known that 
the Sow is very irritable at this period, Snapping at animals 
when they approach her ; and that in proportion as she is ten- 
derly treated, kept from annoyances, and supplied with proper 
sustenance, the hazard of the accident diminishes or ceases. 
Hogs are not insensible to natural affections: they are 
gregarious and social, warming one another with their bodies 
in cold weather ; and, when assembled in herds, manifesting 
the utmost sympathy for one another’s sufferings. Should 
one give signal of distress, all within hearing rush to his as- 
sistance : they gather round their comrade, and fiercely assail 
the largest animals that have injured him. In Calabria, where 
they are grazed in herds, the keeper uses a kind of bagpipe, 
which, when at sunset they are to be driven homeward, in- 


THE HOG. 421 


a 2 


_ stantly collects them from all parts. In certain villages there 
is a common swineherd: in the morning, when he sounds his 
horn, all the pigs rush forth and follow him to the place of 
feeding ; in the evening they return under his guidance, and 
when they enter the village each runs to his own sty without 
mistake. In some of the Southern United States, it is usual 
to turn the pigs into the woods, but to collect them together 
once a-week, by giving them salt and maize, or other , 
favourite food. At the very hour they are to receive their | 

‘ weekly present, they reassemble from all parts, without a) 
straggler. They have the Sagacity always to discover the - | 
food that suits them, never being, like some other animals _ 

whose senses are blunted by domestication, poisoned by the 

plants they find in the wild state. Their exquisite senses of . 

smell and touch direct them to earth-nuts and other roots, 
acorns, and the like, which are found buried in the ground. 

; They are conscious of an impending storm, and carry straw, 

as if to shelter themselves from its violence. They are agi- 
tated when the wind blows violently, Screaming and running 
to the sty for shelter, which has given rise to this singular 

Saying of the country people, that “ pigs see the wind.” The’ | 

explanation is, that the Hog dreads wetness and cold, and 

is eminently sensitive to coming changes of the weather. 
The Hog is an animal of vast importance, as affording the 

means of subsistence to the inhabitants of different countries. 

The quantity of food of this kind consumed in our own country | . 

is exceedingly great. The animals being reared at home for | 
domestic use, the number brought to market, large as it is, 

does not give an idea of the prodigious quantity of pork pro- . 

duced and consumed. It is almost the only animal food which | 
the peasants of many parts of the country ever touch; and, | 
happily, the animal can be reared on the small scale ag well | 
as on the large, by the peasant at his cabin, as well as by the oe 
opulent farmer. His food, too, is what others reject, and | 
which would be wasted were it not consumed by him. But 
: the importance of the Hog as a mean of human subsistence, | 


meen nt 


siiteeraeee aneeeeeenee ereenmenieit sili 


422 THE HOG. 


is yet more seen in newly settled countries. 4 is the surest 
resource of the settler during his first years of toil and hard: 
‘ship. It is the soonest brought to maturity of all the larger 
quadrupeds, the most easily fed, and the least subject to ac- 
cidents and diseases in a new situation. | . 

The fat of the Hog forms a thick layer beneath the inte- 
guments. It is termed lard, and differs in cheinical compo- 
sition and properties from the fat of the ruminating animals. 
It more readily imbibes salt than any other kind of fat; and 
the same property being possessed by the flesh, there is no 
animal food better suited than pork for preservation by salt- 
ing. On this account it is largely employed in the victuallinge 
of ships, When it is preserved by drying as well as salting, 
it forms bacon, . 

In rearing and fattening, the Hog presents less difficulty 
than any other animal. The Sow goes with young four lunar 
months, bringing forth in the fifth, but, as in the case of all 
animals reduced to servitude, with some irregularity as to 
time. She indicates the period when she is about to produce 
her litter, by carrying straw in her mouth to make her bed. 
For a considerable time, however, before this period, she 
should have been separated from her fellows of the herd, 
placed in a warm house, supplied with suitable food, and kept 
carefully littered with clean dry straw. These precautions 
are required to allay that irritation to which she is subject 
at the time of producing her young, increased by her being 
suddenly removed from her companions, and putina strange 
place. Care must be taken not to handle the young pigs, or 
remove them from the places in which they have been put by 
the dam, for she herself knows where they nestle, and in this 
case takes care not to crush them when she lies down. The 
straw, too, should be short, and in moderate quantity, lest the 
young should creep underneath it unperceived by the mother. 
During all the period of nursing, the Sow should be well fed, 
and the troughs so placed, that the pigs may be allowed to 
partake of the food. In six weeks, if the pigs have been well 


THE HOG. 423 


fed, they may be weaned, and in all cases in two months. 


When they are separated from the dam, they should be re- — 


gularly fed three times in the day, and their food should at 
first consist of whey, milk, or any refuse of the dairy or 
kitchen, mixed with a little warm water, so as to be raised 
to the temperature of the mother’s milk. In a short time 


they learn to partake of all edible substances that are pre-. 


sented to them, as potatoes, turnips, tares, lucerne. 

_ The females reserved for breeding are to be sufficiently fed, 
and not over-fattened. The other pigs should receive from 
the period of weaning, until they are fit for use, a full allow- 
ance of such food as the means at our command will allow. 
In this manner the animal arrives the soonest at its maturity 
of flesh and fatness, and the younger it is when it arrives at 
this state the more delicate is its flesh. Any kind of vege- 
table or animal food may be given to pigs, in the course of 
being reared and fattened, and it constitutes the peculiar 
value of these animals that they can be maintained on almost 
any kind of aliment. They will feed even on herbage, pas- 
turing in the fields and commons ; but roots rather than her- 


bage are their native food. Acorns, chestnuts, beech-mast,. 


hazel-nuts, and other esculent fruits, are eagerly consumed 
by them ; and in countries of forests they may be convenienly 
suffered to range in the woods, and find their own food. They 
are fond of all fruits; and hence, in the countries of the grape, 
the ravages which the Wild Hog commits: in the places where 
cider is produced, they are fed on spoiled fruits, and on the 
residue of the cider-mil] ; in the countries of the olive, on 
the refuse of the oil-press ; and generally, where the olea- 
ginous plants are cultivated, on the refuse of the manufac- 
ture. Hay or dried fodder ig not adapted to these animals, 
though, if chopped and boiled, they will not reject it. But 


their proper vegetable forage is that which is moist and suc-. 


culent; and hence they will feed on clovers, tares, lucerne, 
sainfoin, succory, and the like. They feed eagerly on all 


kinds of roots and tubers, as the turnip, the potato, the. 


424 THE HOG. 


Jerusalem artichoke. This kind of food they will eat either 
in the natural state, or when prepared by boiling. This 
latter process is well adapted to prepare several kinds of 
roots, as the turnip, for fattening these animals. They de- 
light, in an especial degree, in all kinds of farinaceous sub- 
stances, aS meal, bran, pease or beans bruised, and generally 
on the seeds of all gramineous and leguminous plants, the 
buckwheat and others. They may be fattened on the grains 
of breweries, and on the grains as well as the wash or liquid 
refuse of distilleries, They may be fattened, too, with ani- 
mal substances, and, above all, with the refuse of the kitchen 
and the dairy. Attention to warmth and cleanliness should, 
at every period, be paid to them when confined. It is an 
*rror to suppose that they may be left in a state of neglect 
and filth. It may seem absurd to say that the Hog is a 
cleanly animal, yet it does not appear that his endurance of 
filth is a matter of choice, or his rolling in the mire, any 
thing but the effect of that love of coolness and moisture 
which distinguishes him in the state of nature. 

The Hog is subject to remarkable changes of form and 
characters, according to the situations in which he is placed. 
When these characters assume a certain degree of perma- 
nence, a breed or variety is formed ; and there is none of the 
domesticated animals which more easily receives the charac- 
ters we desire to impress upon it. This arises from its rapid 
powers of increase, and the constancy with which the charac- 
ters of the parents are reproduced in the progeny. There is 
no kind of live-stock that can be so easily improved by the 
breeder, and so quickly rendered: suited to the purposes re- 
quired. And the same characters of external form indicate 
in the Hog a disposition to arrive at early maturity of muscle 
and fatness, as in the Ox and Sheep. The body is large in 
proportion to the limbs, or, in other words, the limbs are 
short in proportion to the body; the extremities are free from 
coarseness, the chest is broad, and the trunk round. Pos- 
sessing these characters, the Hog never fails to arrive at 


i: 


BREEDS. 425 


earlier maturity, and with a smaller consumption of food, 
than when he possesses a different conformation. 

Of the races or breeds of the Hog in different countries, 
the varieties are innumerable. One that requires especial 
notice, as having been mixed in blood with the Swine of 
Some parts of Europe, and very largely with those of Eng- 
land, is the widely-diffused SIAMESE BREED. 

The south-eastern countries of Asia, it is well known, 
comprehending the territories of the Birmans, the kingdoms 
of Cambodia, Siam, Cochin-China, Malacca, and others, are 
covered with forests of magnificent growth, which are filled 
with numerous animals, amongst which the Hog abounds. 
In all these countries the Hog has been reduced to domesti- 
eation, and over all the rich and populous empire of China 
proper, and the neighbouring islands and countries, it is 
largely cultivated for human food. The Hogs of these coun- 
tries present certain characters which may distinguish them 
from those of Europe, but they have all the habits of our 
common Swine, and breed as freely with them as the latter 


' do with one another. 


The race supposed to be the most typical of the domesti- 
cated Hogs of those countries has been termed the Siamese 
breed, from the kingdom of Siam, situated on the gulf of 
that name, nearly in the centre of the countries sometimes 
termed India beyond the Ganges. But the terms the Bir- 
man, the Cambodian, the Malacca breed, would be equally 
applicable; and, therefore, by the designation Siamese Breed, 
must be understood not a race proper to Siam, but to a vast 
extent of country situated in this part of Asia. 

The individuals are of smal] size, and have a cylindrical 
body, with the back somewhat hollow, and the belly trailing 
near the ground, in consequence of the shortness of the limbs. 
The bristles are soft, approaching to the characters of hair: 
the colour is usually black, and the skin externally of a rich 
copper colour. The ears are short, small, and somewhat erect. 
The animals are less hardy and prolific than the native races 


426 THE HOG, 


of Europe, and the females do not yield the same quantity 
of milk ; but they arrive very soon at maturity, they fatten 
on a small quantity of food, and their flesh is white and 
delicate. 

The varieties of this widely extended race with which we 
are chiefly conversant in this country, are derived from 
China, being brought hither as sea-stock, or otherwise, by 
the vessels employed in the trade which England has so long 
carried on with the Chinese empire. They have usually the 
dark colour characteristic of the race, but they are often also 
white, and of a size exceeding the medium; for in China 
there are varieties of breeds, just as in other countries. 
Some of them kept in the temples attain, in consequence of 
age and long fattening, to enormous magnitude ; but it does 
not appear that these sacred pigs are any otherwise distin- 
_ guished from the common breeds. The Chinese race with 
which we are chiefly familiar, is derived from the neighbour- 
hood of Canton. Those of the interior, or bordering on the 
Tartar countries, are little known to us. 

Tt is well known that the Chinese feed more largely on 
pork than on any other kind of animal food. To this cause 
some have attributed the rejection by the Chinese of the 
Mohammedan faith. However this be, the flesh of the Hog 
appears to have been long the food of this singular people, 
and the animal itself is almost the only considerable quadru- 
ped except the Dog, which is cultivated by them for human 
subsistence. It is said that they sometimes use the milk of 
the Sow ; at least, there is reason to believe that they supply 
with this substance the strangers who visit them. The Eng- 
lish merchants and sailors who arrive at the port of Canton 
are thus unconsciously furnished with a Substance, perfectly 
wholesome and nutritious, it may be believed, but the use of 
which is revolting to the habits of Europeans. 

The Chinese pay a minute care to the rearing and feeding 
of an animal so important to them as a mean of subsistence : 
but the information of travellers is exceedingly scanty with 


nee n = 


> es 


BREEDS. 427 


respect to the really useful details of practice in this as in 
other branches of their rural economy. - We learn, however, 
that, in the treatment of the animal, an extreme attention 
is paid to cleanliness and regular feeding. English traders 
who have resided in the suburbs of Canton, describe the care 
of the Chinese, in this respect, as exceeding any thing that 
is practised in Europe. It is much to be regretted that we 
remain So ignorant of the few useful arts, in which we might 


_ hope to profit by the experience of this jealous people. Their 


knowledge of details, founded on experience and practice, is 
nearly all they have to communicate. Of principles, and 
any thing that can be termed Science, they are as ignorant 
as barbarians: they can exhibit mechanical skill, and imi- 
tate what is placed before them ; but in almost every thing 
that relates to the higher powers of inventive genius they are 


as yet in the state of children. During their boasted dy- 


nasties of numerous centuries, the Chinese people have been: 
the slaves of etiquette and form. They have formed an em- 
pire, but one in which the human mind has been doomed to 
Stationary bondage, 

- The Hogs of China which have been introduced into Eng- 
land, are too delicate and sensible of cold to be of much eco- 
nomical value. The breed, therefore, is rarely maintained 
in its state of purity. It is chiefly by intermixture with the 
native races that its value is recognised; and it is in this. 
respect that the introduction of the Chinese breed into Eng- 
land has been attended with beneficial results. The fault of 
the old Swine of England was their coarseness of. form, and 
their consequent inability to arrive at early maturity of: 
muscle and fatness. The mixture of the Asiatie blood ‘has. 
everywhere tended to correct this defect; though, at the same 
time, it has lessened the size of the native races, and perhaps 
their power to produce numerous young. The flesh of these 
Hastern Hogs is peculiarly tender and good, but it is suited 
for pork for the table, rather than for bacon. The pure race 
communicates the quality of itg pork to its mixed descend- _ 


428 THE HOG. 


ants; and it is this transmitted character, as much as the 
aptitude to fatten, which has induced so general an infusion 
of the Siamese blood into the breeds of this country. 

Of the other races of Eastern Asia, we scarcely know any 

thing. In the woods of the large and fertile Island of Papua, 
or New Guinea, has been found a race of small Hogs, which 
has been classed as a distinct Species, under the name Sus 
Papuensis. They are destitute of tusks, and the tail is want- 
ing. The colour is brown, and, in the young state, five 
| Streaks of bright yellow extend along the back. The animals — 
/ are caught by the natives in the woods when young, and re-_ 
tained in a state of captivity. 
' On the discovery, by European voyagers, of the Islands of 
the South Seas, a kind of Hog was found in great numbers, 
affording to the simple natives their principal animal food. 
He was held by them in a kind of veneration, and was offered 
up to their divinities as the most acceptable sacrifice. They 
could give no account of his introduction amongst them, 
but regarded him as coeval with themselves. They fed him 
with yams, and such other nutritive plants as the islands 
produced. His flesh is described by our early voyagers as de- 
licious, the fat resembling, in delicacy and flavour, the finest 
butter. It has been doubted by some whether this race is of 
the widely diffused Siamese breed, or whether it is allied to 
the Sus Papuensis, or some other species yet undescribed, pro- 
per to the Islands of the Eastern Seas. None of this breed, 
So far as is known, has yet been introduced into Europe. 

The Breeds of European countries vary so much, even 
| within the narrowest limits, that no classification of them 
\ can be made. In general, it may be said, that the most de- 
licate Hogs are found in the warmer latitudes. In the cooler 
countries of richer herbage, as Holland, Belgium, part of 
Germany, and the north of France, they tend to become large 
in bulk, having long bodies, and pendent ears. In Sweden, 
the north of Russia, and the higher latitudes generally, they 
are frequently of a rufous-brown colour, of small Size, and 


BREEDS. 429 


wild habits, as if deviating less from the type of the Wild 
Hog, than in the more temperate countries. ae 
The Breeds of the British Islands, which may be regarded. ) 


4s native, may be divided into two general classes; first, | 


those of smaller size, with the ears erect, or tending to erect ; 
and, secondly, those of larger body, with the ears long and — 


pendent. But between these extremes, there are such de- 


grees, that numbers cannot be reduced to either class. 

Of the smaller breeds, with sub-erect ears, the most 
marked are those of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland. 
These creatures are of very small size, usually of a dusky- 
brown colour, having an arched back, with coarse bristles 
along the neck and spine. They approach to the aspect of the 
Wild Hog, without having acquired its habits. They are hardy 
in a remarkable degree, and adapted to find their food in the 
situations in which they are placed. They are left to forage 
for themselves, and have usually no shelter afforded them. 
They graze on the heathy hills and moors, grubbing up the — 
roots of plants with their strong snouts, and feeding on the 
Sea-coasts on alge, shell-fish, and the bodies of fishes which 
are cast on shore. In ranging over the hills, they destroy 
the eggs of plovers, grouse, and other birds, nay devour such 
new-born lambs as come in their way. They are the pest of 
the cultivated fields, rooting up the growing potatoes, and 


committing prodigious havoc in the corn-fields of their care- 


less masters. They are generally very lean, and their flesh, 


in this state, is Coarse-and fibrous; but when confined and 
fed in a proper manner, they become fat more quickly than 
their grisly exterior would indicate. When their principal 
food is fish; their flesh acquires an oily disagreeable taste. 
The next class of breeds consists of those having a large 
body, and long pendent ears. These are the races of the 
lower country, which have been long in the domesticated 
state. They are of different colours, but are mostly white, 
or white spotted with black. They fatten slowly, require 
much food, and are late in arriving at maturity. When fat- 


430 THE HOG, 


tened at the age of two or three years, they become of enor- 
mous magnitude. Few, however, perfectly unmixed with 
foreign blood, now remain. Those that are to be found, are 
merely scattered individuals, in remote districts, or in the 
hands of old farmers unwilling to change their modes of hus- 
bandry, or in the possession of persons who retain the fe- 
-males for the purpose of rearing large pigs. They are chiefly 
to be found in Ireland, and, until lately, were very humerous 
in that country. The cause of their disappearance is the 
mixture of blood with that of the more improved breeds. 

In the cases where the older races exist without intermix- 
ture, the animal presents remarkable characters. Tis form is 
uncouth ; the bones are large, and the limbs long ; the back is 
arched and narrow, the shoulder low, the face long, the ears 
are large and flapping. It presents, in truth, a combination 
of the characters which breeders now wish to avoid. Yet, 
with all their defects, these animals possess one important 
property. The females produce large litters, and are the 
best of all nurses for their young. If crossed with the supe- 
rior races, as with the Chinese or the Berkshire, the imme: 
diate progeny is always good, retaining the size of the dam, 
and acquiring the aptitude to fatten of the Superior male. 
Thriftless, then, as these animals are in themselves, with 
relation to their power of fattening on a given Supply of 
food, yet any one who possesses a Sow of this kind, will find. 
her more valuable than any other for the purpose of rearing 
pigs. 

In Yorkshire, Lincolnshire, Norfolk, and generally in the 
eastern counties, there are breeds of large size, of a white 
colour, and with pendent ears. These breeds have been cul- 
tivated with more or less care, and have all been affected in 
their form and characters by crossing. The county of Suf- 
folk has been long noted for producing large quantities of 
pork, chiefly for the supply of the London market; and the 
white breed of Suffolk became early known for its goodness. 
This breed, however, has been crossed and recrossed by the 


ee ee 


“BREEDS. 431 


Chinese, or descendants of the Chinese variety, so as to suit 


_ Its size to the demand of the consumers. The Essex breed 


has, in like manner, been crossed with the smaller and finer 
breeds, so as to lessen its size, and increase the delicacy of 
the pork; and the’ Essex Hogs are peculiarly distinguished. 
by the fineness of the skin and softness of the hair. 

The same system of crossing has been applied to all the 
former breeds of the country, the Northampton, the Shrop- 
shire, the Hampshire, the Rudgwick. The latter, so called 
from a village of that name on the borders of Surrey and 
Sussex, were the largest Swine in England, and perhaps in the 
world. ‘The Hampshire Hogs were also a very noted breed, 
from their being of large size, and well suited for bacon. 
But the distinctive characters of these various races have \ 
been more or less effaced, so that varieties described by for- J 
mer observers cannot now be traced. In general, it may be | 
said that all the breeds of this country have been tending to | 
a smaller size and greater uniformity of character. 

Of the breeds of England, one greatly valued is the Berk- 


Shire. It is so termed from the county of that name, though 


the principal improvement of the breed was made in the | 
counties farther north, chiefly in Leicestershire and Stafford- 
shire. It still retained, however, its original designation, 
and the Berkshire has been long known as one of the most 
generally spread of the improved breeds of England. 

The true Berkshires are of the larger races of Swine, 
though they fall short in size of some of the older breeds, as 
the Hampshire, the Rudgwick, and others. They are usually 
of a reddish-brown colour, with brown or black spots, a cha- 


racter which makes i} appear that one of the means employed 
to improve them was a cross with the Wild Hog. The Berk- 
shire is still regarded ag one of the superior breeds of Eng- 
land, combining, size with a Sufficient aptitude to fatten, and 
being fitted for pork and bacon ; and it is held to be the hardi- 
est of the more improved races. 


But the Berkshire breed has, like every other, been crossed 


432 THE HOG. 


and recrossed with the Chinese, or Chinese crosses, so as to 
lessen the size of the animals, and render them more Suited 
to the demand which has arisen for small and delicate pork. 
Many of the modern breed are nearly black, indicating their 
approach to the Siamese character, and sometimes they are 
black broken with white, shewing the effects of the cross with 
the white Chinese. From this intermixture, it becomes in 
many cases difficult to recognise, in the present race, the 
characters of the true Berkshire. The great improver of the 
breed was Richard Astley, Esq. of Oldstonehall. 

Although no doubt can exist with respect to the great 
benefit that has arisen from diminishing the size and coarse- 
ness of the former Swine of England, yet, assuredly, there 
should be limits to this diminution of size in the Hog, as of 
every other animal cultivated for food. In many cases the 
diminution of size has been merely to suit the caprice of taste. 
The larger kinds of pigs do not find a ready sale in the mar- 
kets of great cities, and hence the more essential property of 
an abundant production of butchers’ meat is sacrificed. But 
we should remember that the supply of pork is of great im- 
portance to the support of the inhabitants of this country. 
In the state of bacon it is largely consumed by the mass of 
the people, and in the salted state, it is used for the supplies 
of our numerous shipping. It is not, therefore, for the gene- 
ral good, that the old breeds of England should be merged 
in the smaller races of China and other countries. 


While we should improve by every means the larger breeds” 


that are left us, we should take care that we do not sacrifice 
them altogether. The country might one day regret that 
this over-refinement had been practised, and future improvers 
exert themselves in vain to recover those fine old breeds 
which had been abandoned. In place of unceasing crossing 
with the smaller races, it would be more praiseworthy and 
beneficial to apply to our larger races those principles of 
breeding which, in the case of our other animals, have so well 
succeeded. By mere selection of the parents, we could re- 


9 


x 


errr, ; 


THE HOG. 433 


_ move the defective characters of the larger breeds, and give 
to them all the degree of fineness which consists with their 
bulk of body ; for there is no animal so easily changed in form 
and moulded to our purposes as the Hog. 
Amongst the kinds of crossing, that with the Wild Hog 


has been lately revived to some extent. The only good effect \ 


of this cross is a certain improvement of the flesh, by mixing 
the fat more equally with the lean; for, in the Wild Hog, as 
in all the less cultivated races of the Domestic Animals, the 


fat is more mixed with the muscular parts. But otherwise / 


the crossing with the wild race does not seem to be advisable. 
The form of the Wild Hog is not the perfect one at which 
the breeder should aim, and we have greatly better models 


presented to us in the best of the breeds already improved | 


by cultivation. 
Hogs are from time to time brought by our innumerable 
shipping from the countries of the Mediterranean, ag Italy, 
Turkey, Spain, and mingled with the Swine of the country, 
Of the Mediterranean breeds, the Maltese wag at one time 
in favour. Tt was of small size, of black colour, nearly des- 


al 


titute of bristles, and capable of fattening quickly. At the | 


_ present time a breed from the country near Naples has been 
introduced, and has been employed very extensively to cross 
the other breeds. This breed, like the Maltese, is of small 


Size, and of a black colour, It¢ ig nearly destitute of hair or) 
bristles, but, on being bred several times in this country, the | 


bristles come. The flesh is exceedingly good, but the ani- 


mals themselves are destitute of hardiness, and unsuited for 
general use. But they have been made to cross the other 
Swine of the country, and the progeny exhibit much fineness 
of form and aptitude to fatten. Their flesh, too, is delicate, 
on which account the Neapolitan crosses are at the present 
time in considerable favour in several parts of England. But 
there are other Faces of Italy which might, with greater 
benefit than that of Naples, have been introduced into this 
country. The best Hogs of Italy are supposed to be pro- 


434 THE HOG. 


duced in the Duchy of Parma. They are of larger size than 
those of Naples, while they possess even greater aptitude to 
fatten, and yield pork equally white and delicate. Hogs are 
sometimes introduced from Africa. Their descendants are 


of tolerable size and square form, and, like the other Hogs 
of warmer countries, fatten with facility. 


ARABIAN HORSE, 


V. THE HORSE, 


Tur Equipa constitute 


a small but noble tribe of quadru- 
peds, which have been te 


| | rmed Solidungula, from their hay- 
ing but single apparent toes, covered by undivided integu- 
ments of horn. Their stomach ig Single, and their food vege- 
table. Their limbs are Strong and sinewy, and their general 
to rapid movements. They have 


» IN Some of the Species harsh and braying, 


ous. They are social and migra- 


436 THE HORSE. 


tory, inhabiting the open country rather than woody coverts. 
They abounded in a former condition of the world, their 
fossil remains existing in numerous mineral deposites. Va- 
rious species are yet found living in the state of nature, or 
reduced to servitude. These species have usually been re- 
garded by naturalists, following the illustrious Linneus, as 
constituting a single genus, Equus; although some prefer 
dividing them into two distinct genera, namely, ASINUS, of 
which the Ass is typical, and Equus, represented by the 
Common Horse. But these genera pass the one into the 
other, so that they can only be separated by conventional 
characters; and we shall equally avoid confusion by regard- 
ing them as forming a single genus, of which the species 
may be considered as approaching more or less to the type 
which we term Asinine, or more or less to that which is pre- 
sented in the Horse. In this, as in all parts of the animal 
kingdom, we find a progression, as it were, from species to 
species; so that it may be said the living Equide present 
gradations in form and attributes, from the humbler Ass, 
with his homely exterior, his rudimental mane, and his harsh 
and grating voice, to the beautiful creature, in which the form 
and qualities of his tribe are most highly developed. 
The WILD ASS, Ovayeos of the Greeks, Onager of the Ro- 
mans, inhabits the regions of steril wilderness which stretch 
from the deserts of Syria eastwards between the northern 
shores of the Persian Gulf and the great saline Lake of Aral, 
extending his range eastward into the boundless regions of | 
the Tartars, and southward to the deserts beyond the Indus. 
He is found congregated in troops, sometimes in great num- 
bers. together. He trusts for safety to the exquisite senses 
with which he is endowed, and shuns the fatal neighbour- 
hood of man. In this his natural state of freedom, he shews 
himself to be endowed with characters and instincts which fit 
him for his condition. He prefers the bitter and-saline plants 
of the desert to the herbage of the richer plains. He con- 


tents himself with the water of brackish pools and saline 


HISTORY. - 437 


springs. He is wary in a high degree, exquisite in his 
senses of sight and hearing, swift in flight, bold in scaling 
the rocky precipice, and resolute in his own defence.. When 
attacked, he employs his teeth and posterior limbs, without 
abating his flight. He is hunted by the tribes of the desert 
for his skin, and for his flesh, which is greatly esteemed by 
the Tartar nations. He is sometimes, it is said, taken in 
pitfalls, and thus reduced to servitude. He is hunted by the 
Persians with a large kind of greyhound trained to the chase. 
_ From the earliest times we have records of the habits and 
condition of this wild and migratory creature. The Sacred 
Writings make him the subject of many beautiful descriptions 
and allusions. “ Who hath sent out the Wild Ass free ? or who 
hath loosed the bands of the Orud ? whose home I have made 
the wilderness, and the salt land his dwellings. The range 
of the mountains is his pasture, and he searcheth after every 
green thing.” He is often referred to as typical of indocility, 
perverseness, and scorn of control ; and his very presence is 
associated with images of barrenness and desolation. “Upon — 
the land of my people shall come up thorns and briers, yea, 
upon all the houses of joy in the joyous city ; because the pa- 
laces shall be forsaken; the multitude of the city shall be 
left; the forts and towers shall be for dens for ever, a joy of 
Wild Asses, a pasture of floeks.” 

The Wild Ass of the Desert is yet familiar to the people 
of the countries which he inhabited of old. In stature he 
equals the larger domesticated breeds. His ears are long, 
and very moveable. His fur varies in colour, from brownish 
to a silvery gray, being paler’ on the head, shoulders, and 
haunches, nearly white on the limbs and lower part of the 
belly, and dark brown on the mane, with a streak of the 
same colour, forming a cross on the shoulder, and extending 
along the spine. He is termed by the Persians Gor; and this 
name coupled with Khur, the Persian term for an Ass, forms 
Gor-KKhur, by which designation the Wild Ass is known in 


_ various countries of the East. 


438 THE HORSE. 


But besides the Wild Ass, properly so called, it has been 
believed that another species, approaching yet more in con- 
formation to the domesticated kinds, is found within the same 
geographical limits. It has been described as the Hamar of 
the Persians. But Hamar is merely the Arabic for a male 
Ass; and the figures given by travellers of a species of this 
name, are manifestly the representation of an animal that 
has been domesticated, and not of a species really wild. 

But Wild Asses extend to the great African Continent, 
and present characters which appear to distinguish them from 
_ those of Asia. They were classed by the Romans under the . 
general term, Onager, and were from time to time exhibited 
in the bloody sports of the amphitheatre, while their colts were 
regarded as a luxury by the gluttonous epicures of Rome. 
They have been seen by many travellers, from the countries 
of the Red Sea to Cape Verde on the Atlantic; and they 
have been recently observed in great numbers above the cata- 
racts towards the high lands of Bahr-el Ariad, or White Nile. 
They are described as being of delicate form, as having the 
hair very fine, of a silver-gray colour on the back, and pale 
ashy-blue on the neck and sides, with the mane and tail black, 
a dark cross on the shoulder, and a streak along the dorsal 
line of the same colour. It is not known whether all the 
Asses of Africa present the same characters. Those in the 
‘subjugated state exhibit a certain difference of aspect in dis- 
tant localities. Adanson, in describing those of Senegal, 
brought by the Moors from the interior, says that he could 
| not recognise them to be the same animals as those of Europe. 

From the Onagri of Asia and Africa, however distinguished 
from one another by minor characters, it is reasonable to 
suppose the domesticated races have been derived. But, at 
'’ the same time, from the different characters which appear in 
the subjugated races, even in the same localities, it is not im- 
possible that the blood of allied species, as of the Hemionus, 
‘to be immediately referred to, has been mixed with that of 
the common kinds. But from whatever stirps in the natural 


* HISTORY. 439 


state the Common Ass has been derived, this creature, we 
know, has been subjected to captivity from the earliest con- 
gregation of men into societies. Amongst the treasures of 
the early shepherds of Syria, the Ass is continually men- . 
tioned, along with the Camel and the Ox, as the beast em- 
ployed in journeyings and the bearing of burdens; and even 
after the return of the descendants of Israel from a country 
of chariots and horses to the land of their promised inheri- 
tance, they preserved the simple habits of their forefathers 
in the use of this ancient servant. They seem to have had 
their asses of nobler blood, to which they applied a peculiar 
term. Princes and the honourable of the land did not dis- 
dain to be borne by this ancient steed. Saul, when called 
by a glorious destiny to be the King of Israel, was in search . 
of his father’s asses, or atonoth, which had strayed. His 
warlike successor had his superintendent of atonoth, as of 
the other branches of his government; and even after the 
Horse was introduced for the purposes of traffic and war, 
the services of the patient Ass were neither disused nor de- 
spised. He was, in like manner, domesticated from the - 
earliest times by the Arabians, the Persians, and other people 
of the East. He was familiar to the Egyptians, as history 
and their sculptured monuments attest; to the Libyans ; 
and, it may be believed, to the other inhabitants of Africa 
bordering on the Great Desert. He was known to the Greeks, 
as we learn from their earliest writers ; to the Romans, who 
cultivated the race with care; to the Spaniards, whose early 
intercourse with the Phcenicians and Carthaginians could not - 
fail to make them familiar with so useful a creature. Ac- 
cording to Strabo, he was unknown to the Britons, and to 
the inhabitants of the countries of the Baltic. He at length 
found his way beyond the Alps into Gaul, and, at a period 
comparatively recent, into the northern countries of Europe. 
The Ass, reduced to bondage, loses the fleetness, the spirit, 
and the wildness, which he possesses in the state of nature. 
becomes devoted to his 


Unlike to the Horse, who readily 


ete RNY Tel in ea ANON 5 


440 THE HORSE. 


master, and gives up all his powers to his use, this creature 
seems to yield an unwilling service, and to feel the degrada- 
tion of servitude. Yet he submits with patience to his lot, 
and his progeny do not seem to recover the wildness of their 
parents ; for it is not known that the progeny of the domes- 
ticated Ass ever seek to regain their liberty by joining their 
fellows of the desert. It is otherwise with the Horse, who 
is readily tempted to join the emancipated herds, and fly from 
the bondage in which he has lived. In South America, nu- 
merous Asses have been allowed to escape into the plains, 
and multiply in a state of nature; but they never acquire 
the habits of their free-born progenitors of the desert: they 
linger near the places of their birth, and fall an easy prey to 
their enemies. The change of nature in the Ass, by the 
effects of subjugation, is entire, It seems to be less the 
effect of discipline and education than of simple deprivation 
of liberty. Thus it is that the Ass was amongst the earliest 
of the quadrupeds subjected to permanent servitude, and re- 


tains so strongly the impress of slavery. 

In his state of domestication, the Ass is patient of thirst 
and toil, and able to subsist on dry and seanty forage. He 
does not seem to be sensible of cold, but he fears wetness, 
and is reluctant to enter pools and rivers. He is a strong 


animal, and is better adapted to the bearing of burdens and 
drawing of weights than, from his slender limbs and relative 
bulk of body, could be inferred. He is docile and cheerful 
under his burden when kindly used; but when urged to tasks 
beyond his strength, and assailed by unmerited blows, he 
manifests his natural temper. He sometimes draws up his 
lips in a peculiar manner, and shews his teeth with a savage 
grin; an expression of dumb agony which should speak to 
the feelings, in place of exciting derision and repetition of 
insult. It is painful to think that this creature, so meek, so 
patient in our service, so grateful for our kindness, should 
be too generally treated with contumely and harshness. Do 
we not consider that he is a creature who is only degraded 


HISTORY. 441 


by our abuse of him, and a slave because Nature has formed 
him with the instinct to resign his physical powers to our 
Service? His figure, his voice, his very patience and sub- 
mission, have been the subject of ridicule in every age. He 
has been regarded as the very emblem of stupidity, per- 
verseness, and obstinacy, “tardus, piger, stupidus, stolidus.” 
With respect to his form, we say that this, like that of all 
the Equine family, is indicative of activity. His ears indeed 
are somewhat long for our taste; but his ears, we should 
remember, are the organs which in the desert enable him to 


collect the distant sounds, and avoid the danger of his ene- 


mies ; and his voice, which appears to us so inharmonious 
and rade, is designed to resound through the wilderness he 


‘inhabits, to warn his comrades of danger, and collect the 


distant members of the troop. His submission and patience 
do not surely demand excuse, yet even these are not the cha~ 
racteristics of his free-born state, but of that condition in 
which Nature forms him to be useful to us. His stupidity 
is merely inferred from his external aspect ; for his actions 
do not exhibit a want of sagacity ; and with respect to his 
obstinacy and perverseness, it may be said that these are 
the result of our ungenerous use of his services, for, when 
treated with kindness, he manifests neither indocility nor 
want of attachment to his protector. 

This animal, though capable of enduring great cold, is the 
creature of the temperate and warmer countries. It is to 
them that his temperament is adapted, and his spirit seems 
to droop when he is reared in the higher latitudes. The 
Asses of the north of Europe cannot be compared with those 
of Syria, Persia, and the countries of the Levant, nor with 
those of Spain and the north of Africa. The Persians, though 
a nation of horsemen, pay great attention to the rearing of | 
an animal so suited to a rocky and arid country. They have — 
their different breeds, some of which are very large, and 
suited to draught and the bearing of burdens, and others 
are light and fitted for the saddle. Also, in Syria and Asia 


442 THE HORSE. 


Minor are to be seen fine asses employed in travelling and 
the labours of the field. In the arid deserts of Arabia, the 
Ass shares with the Camel the burden of transporting the 
tents and merchandise of the wandering tribes, the goods 
of the caravan, or the solitary traveller. In Barbary and 
Egypt, a light and agile kind of Ass is found. In Cairo, 
numbers of them are to be seen standing ready saddled for 
hire, serving the same purpose as hackney-coaches with us. 
They are treated by their owners in the Same manner ag 
horses, rubbed carefully, and fed on chopped straw, beans, 
and barley. They are healthy, cheerful, and gentle, and the 
safest animals that can be ridden. Their usual pace is a 
pleasant amble, and they carry their riders rapidly and with- 
out fatigue from place to place in the straggling city. The 
Asses of the caravans of the interior frequently arrive in 
Egypt, after having carried their riders sixty days and more 
through the deserts, as fresh as if they had started the day 
before. It is in situations like these that the services which 
this creature renders save him from the unmerited contempt 
which elsewhere accompanies him. 

Of the Asses of European countries, those of Greece, Italy, 
and Spain, have long possessed the greatest reputation ie 
their superior qualities. Greece had the means of obtaining 
the Asiatic races from the countries on the Black Sea and 
the Caspian. Those of Arcadia are celebrated by early 
writers, and Cappadocia is mentioned as supplying Greece — 
with a valuable race. The breeds of modern Greece and the 
islands of the Archipelago, though treated with the neglect 
with which every thing useful is treated in those countries, 
are still greatly superior to those of the northern parts of 
Europe. The Romans paid extreme attention to the rearing 
of this animal ; and in the days of the Empire paid enormous 
Sums for procuring those that were the most beautiful and 
of the finest races. Italy still produces Asses of a valuable 
kind. But of all the countries of Europe, Spain is the most 
distinguished for these animals. Many of them are fifteen 


HISTORY. | 443 


hands high, and of corresponding strength and fine figure. 
The communication of this country with the East and with 
Africa, doubtless produced an early attention to the race; 
and the extensive employment of the Mule has since caused 
an extreme care to be devoted to the rearing of the parent 
stock. The Asses of Spain are more numerous than the 
Horses. 

In the New World, the Ass, like all the domesticated ani- 
mals of the Old, has found a habitation suited to his condi- 
tion, He is sometimes employed, though more rarely than 


_ the Mule, in the bearing of travellers and burdens through 


the terrible passes of the Andes, and then he manifests 
courage, fidelity, and sagacity. He bears his rider along the 
ledge of the precipice, where the foot can scarcely find a 
resting-place, and where a false step would entail destruction 
upon both. Sometimes he descends declivities so steep and 
dangerous that they seem impassable. The faithful creature 


stops when he arrives at the edge of the descent, pauses, and 


will not move until he has prepared himself for the danger. 
He views the path before him, and at length, bringing his 
hinder legs beneath him, he glides down the precipice with 
frightful rapidity. He follows the winding of the path as if 


he had fixed in his mind the very track he was to follow. 


The rider trusts all to his guidance: the slightest check of 
the rein might disturb the equilibrium, and cause both to be 
hurled into the abyss below. 

In the British Islands, asses are in great numbers, chiefly 
used by the poorer classes. The animal was known in Eng- 
land even during the reign of the Anglo-Saxon Kings, but 
their numbers were small; for even in the reign of Elizabeth 
they were regarded as foreign to the land. During the reign 
of James I., however, they had become common. They are 
now an object of economical importance. They are chiefly, 
indeed, the property of the poor ; but, whoever owns them, 
they are beasts of useful labour, largely used by a numerous 
class, and meriting more attention than they have yet re- 


a a 


444 THE HORSE. 


ceived. Great numbers of she-asses are kept about London 
and the larger towns, for the purpose of supplying a mild, 
salutary, and nutritive liquid to the infirm. 

Although the Ass does not well support the temperature 
of the higher latitudes, yet beyond a question the breed could 
be greatly improved even in countries colder than our own. 
Were a proper selection to be made of the parents for breed- 
ing, and were the young to be properly fed, so that their form 
might be developed, and were they to be sheltered from the 
inclemency of the weather in the same manner as the Horse, 
we would succeed in rearing Asses greatly superior in 
strength and spirit to the diminutive creatures which we see 
on our highways and commons. The animals, indeed, are 
mostly in the hands of those who have not the means to pro- 
cure proper males, or pursue a right system of management; 
but on this account it is the more important that some atten- 
tion should be paid to the subject by the wealthier classes. 
Our commercial relations with Spain and the Levant would 
enable us, at no great cost, to improve the defective races of 
the country by the easiest means. 

Besides the direct services which the Ass can render to us 
as a beast of burden, he is endowed with the faculty of pro- 
pagating a race of animals Superior to himself in strength, 
and equal in sagacity, patience, and fortitude. The Mule j is 
-a creature invaluable in the countries in which he is reared 
for his many and varied services. In Spain, he is the beast 
of burden the most generally used and esteemed. He is em- 
ployed in coaches and chariots of all kinds, and used for the 
saddle even by people of condition, as safe, hardy, and suited 
to distant journeys. In a rocky and precipitous country he 
is, of all known animals, the best adapted for the carrying of 
loads. He has the mountain habits of the Ass with the 
strength of his other parent. Countries divided from one 
another by precipitous mountains would remain separated in 
intercourse but for this hardy creature. In the transporting 
of merchandise across the dreadful cliffs of the Cordilleras, 


HISTORY. | 445 


no animal can be compared with the Mule. The parent Ass, 
Sagacious as he is, though he will bear the rider through 
the dizzy pass, cannot support those weighty loads which the 
Mule can carry with ease. Even when human life is at.stake, 
the sagacity and sure-footedness of the Mule may be equally 
trusted as the parent Ass. Like him, he moves along the 


slippery edge of the precipice, climbs the barrier of rocks, 


and slides down the steep descent. In the Alps and Pyrenees 
his services are in continued requisition, and the danger of 
transporting the traveller and his baggage would be extreme 
without his assistance. In the tropical settlements of 
Europeans, where the sugar-cane is cultivated, the Mule is 
greatly superior to the Horse for the labours of the mill and 
other works, ' 

The Mule was known in the earliest ages. The Jews made 
use of him, though their law prohibited the coupling of dif- 
ferent kinds of animals together. He was well known to the 
Persians and other Asiatics, to the Greeks, who employed 
him in rural labour, as we learn from Hesiod and others, and 
to the Romans, who made use of him in their equipages and 
in various ways. The race cannot be propagated by breeding 
from the individuals, though instances exist of the fertility 
of mules with a horse or ass. | 


The Mule may be the produce either of a male-ass and a — 


mare, or of a she-ass and a horse ; but it is remarkable that, 
in all cases, the former is the larger, finer, and more spirited 


animal. The progeny always most resembles the dam. The_ 


Mule in which the Ass is the mother has long ears, and is of 


a duller temperament and less beautiful form. The mare ) 
receives the male Ass with a species of aversion, though, | 
when the union takes place, conception seems to be as cer- | 


tain as when the animals are of the same species. 


The breeds of the Mule are greatly varied, for the progeny | 


is affected by the difference of character of both parents. | 


The Spaniards use the tallest and finest asses for breeding, 
but the progeny varies according as the mare shall be’of the 


\ 
| 
{ 
i 
| 


cn a er NS i tate namin ase ee 


446 THE HORSE. 


lighter and more delicate breeds, as the Andalusian, or the 
heavier and larger breeds, suited to the labour of draught. 
By employing large mares, as those of Friesland and Nor- 
mandy, mules can be produced nearly equal in stature to the 
tallest horses : these are suited to the plough and the draught 
of any kind: when the mare is finer bred, the mule is best 
fitted for the saddle. Not only in Spain, but in other parts 
of the South of Europe, we meet with fine and graceful mules 
whenever due attention has been paid to the qualities of the 
parents. The Mule differs in this from the parent Ass, that 
he ean be reared in the colder countries equally well as in 
the warmer; nay, he seems to be more robust when the cli- 
mate is not too warm. The Mule is greatly less nice with 
respect to the choice of food than the Horse, is more easily 
maintained, more free from diseases, and less subject to ac- 
cidents. He is soon fit for labour, but is long in arriving at 
maturity. He is very long-lived, and preserves his vigour 
to the last. 

The expedience of extending the cultivation of the Mule jn 
Great Britain is in a high degree worthy of consideration. 
Our means of doing so are equal to those of any country ; 
for, though we must have recourse to other countries for the 
male asses, our intercourse with the countries of the Medi- 
terranean would now render this peculiarly easy ; and in the 
variety of our fine mares, we should have the readiest means 
of producing mules adapted to an y kind of work. The Cleve- 
land Bays, the Suffolk Punches, and other breeds of the larger 
horses, would afford us materials for producing mules of a 
size which would fit them for the dray, or for any kind of 
work to which the largest horses of the country are applied ; 
while, should we require lighter mules for the road, our 
thoroughbred mares and hunters would give us the finest 
that any country has produced, It ig the larger class of 
mules, however, that would probably be the most calculated 
to produce national benefit and private profit. The advan- 
tages to be derived from the use of the Mule in labour might 


Lard 


HISTORY, 447 


be more considerable than many who have never seen the 
animal in his state of improvement could believe. We should 
have an animal with speed superior to the draught-horse, 
hardy, free from innumerable maladies to which the Horse 
is subject, easily maintained, and as docile to the yoke as 
any animal used in labour. It is an error to believe that 
the Mule is vicious and intractable : this is the result of de- 
fective education and improper usage, and will rarely occur 
when the animal is trained up with care, as he should-always 
be, in the manner of the saddle-horse. When a number of 
horses are used in carriers’ waggons, as in England, we should 
derive this advantage from the substitution of the Mule, that 
an equal number of mules would do the same work as the 
larger horses,—would be fed at considerably less cost,— 
would be less liable to accidents and diseases, especially of 
the feet and limbs, from which the Mule is remarkably ex- 
-empt,—would continue to work longer without fatigue,—and 
would last longer. The farmer, too, might derive consider- 
able advantages from a partial use of the Mule. He would 
certainly find him able to maintain an equal pace in the field 
with his other working cattle, and as fit for every labour of 
the farm. As an animal of all work upon a farm, many indi- 
viduals have found the advantage of possessing a single mule. 
Although made the common drudge, subjected to irregular 
labour, harnessed or ridden as the case may require, this, 
the worst-used animal on the farm, has been found to main- 
tain his condition with the best, and at less expense of feed- 
ing. In the few cases in this country where mules have been 


used for the humbler classes of carriages, as taxed carts, 
common gigs, &., they have been found to endure fatigue 
and careless uSage to an extent which no horse could sus- 
tain ; and these trials, it is to be observed, have been usually 
made with an inferior breed of mules, destitute of size, 
strength, and good breeding, | 


The Ass of Africa, it has been said, differs in certain cha- 


448 THE HORSE. 


racters from the Ass of the saline deserts of Asia. It has 
been found in the state of subjugation as far as travellers 
have yet penctrated to the north of the line: but at length 
it gives place to another creature of the same tribe, but more 
graceful in form, more beautiful in colour, not inferior to the 
Wild Ass in swiftness, and still less subject to the influence 
of Man. . . 

The ZEBRA, the Wild Paard of the colonists of the Cape, 
inhabits the mountains of Southern Africa, extending into 
the interior to an unknown distance. He resembles the Ass 
in general form, but he is more compact, graceful, and sym- 
metrical. He is about four feet in height at the shoulder; and 
his limbs are delicate, and his head and hoofs finely formed. 
The ground colour of his fur is whitish, but the whole of his 
body, head, and limbs, is covered with bright black or brown- 
ish-black bands, placed wider or closer together ; those on 
_the upper part of the body connected with the dorsal line ; 
those on the face terminating in the bay-coloured nose. His 
ears are long and moveable, tipped with black, with streaks 
beneath ; his tail is dark, and tufted at the extremity ; his 
mane is erect and bushy, and adorned with alternate bands 
of black and white ; but the Zebra seems to vary in size and 
colour with place, which has given rise to the conjecture, that 
there may be more than one species. This wild and elegant 
creature inhabits the mountains, but descends from time to 
time into the plains, cheering the desert with his graceful 
motions. Like all the Equine tribe, he is gregarious, and 
migrates from place to place in troops. He differs in this 
from the Ass, that he does not tamely resign his freedom. 
Like other wild animals, indeed, he may be reduced to a cer- 


tain degree of subjection ; but he rarely resigns his natural 


indocility, or shews that resignation to the power of man 
which constitutes domestication. We must believe, then, 
that this gay and beautiful Ass is not destined to administer 
to the uses and enjoyments of society, by submitting himself 


o 
a 


HISTORY. 449 


to human control. He breeds with the mare, and the hybrid 
progeny resembles the Mule. goig 

The QuAGGA is taller than the Zebra, his height at the 
Withers being about four feet and a half. His body is more 
round than that of the Zebra; his limbs are robust ; and 
his arching neck is surmounted by an upright mane streak- 
ed with bands of brown. His ears, of moderate length, are 
marked with irregular bands, and, like the Horse, he pos- 
Sesses a tail covered with long hairs. The colour of the 
head, the neck, and the upper part of the body, is a reddish- 
brown, marked with dark brown bands. The streaks be- 
come fainter until they are lost in the shoulder ; a broad 
dark line extends along the back; the brown colour of the 
back becomes gradually more pale towards the lower, parts ; 
and the belly, legs, and tail are white. 

The Quagga inhabits the plains of Southern Africa, within 
nearly the same geographical limits as the Zebra, and extends 
to an unknown distance into the interior. He is found within 
the territories of the Cape, but the use of fire-arms has thin- 
ned his numbers, and driven him beyond the limits of the 
settlers. He is found in the interior in countless herds, 
Spreading over all the plains where water and herbage can 
be found, He is hunted for his flesh by the African tribes. 

The Quagga is of a greatly more gentle and pliant temper 
than the Zebra, and he has Sometimes been tamed for the 
Purposes of draught by the Dutch inhabitants of the Cape. 
Sparrman saw one driven through the streets of Cape-Town, 
in a team with five horses. Another, which had been taken — 
young, was so tame, that it came to be caressed when ap- 
proached. Many yearg ago, a pair used to be seen at Hyde 
Park, in the 84y season, attached to a curricle, and as sub- 
servient to the rein ag well-trained horses. Thus this beau- 
tiful and agile creature ig capable of domestication, and might 
doubtless be applied to all the purposes for which the Horse 
is used, in the wild and arid regions which he inhabits. 
Were not Africa peopled by human beings seemingly in the 

2F 


450 THE HORSE. 


infancy of intellect, we might wonder that this the native 
Horse of Southern Africa had not long ere now been sub- 
jected to domestication. It is more surprising that the 
European inhabitants of the Cape Colony should have omit- 
' ted to subdue an animal so easy to be obtained. These 
lethargic Colonists, however, have manifested equal indif- 
ference to the other means by which their intercourse with 
one another might be facilitated. They have not introduced 
the Camel, so well adapted to the long journeyings of a sandy 
country ; nor the Mule, which would doubtless surpass the 
Ox for the transporting of merchandise. 

The STRIPED QuAGGA, the Dauw, or Bonti Quagga of the 
Cape colonists, was long mistaken for the Zebra, until it 
was distinguished from it by Burchell, from whom it has 
been termed Equus Burchellii. He is about the height of 
the Common Quagga, but less robust in his proportions. He 
has the ears comparatively short, and the hair of the tail 
white and long; and his arching neck is surmounted by an 
' upright mane, about five inches in length, streaked with 
alternate bands of black and white. The muzzle is black ; 
the general colour of the head, neck, and body, is a light 
sienna-brown, variously streaked with black and deep brown 
bands ; the belly, legs, and tail, are of a pure white. 

This beautiful creature is found within the territories of 
the Cape, but chiefly beyond the Gariep river, where it is 
seen in great herds, stretching over boundless plains. It 
extends to an unknown distance, probably beyond the line, 
even to the southern mountains of Abyssinia. It has been 
found in Congo, with a slight difference in colour, and may 
be supposed to vary in other places with the physical state 
of the country it inhabits. 

The Zebras, the Quaggas, and the Dauws, that people the 
wild regions of Southern Africa, confound the imagination 
by their numbers. Mingled with the Gnoos, the Elands, the 
Caamas, the Camelopards, and all the beautiful species of 
Antelopes, they gladden the face of the wilderness, and give 


HISTORY. 451 


an aspect truly African to the scene; whilst Lions, Leopards, — | 


Hyenas, J ackals, and other Fere, restrain their numbers 
within fitting limits. Captain Harris, in his Account of the 
Interior, gives vivid portraitures of the mass of life which 
these wild scenes sometimes present. “ On the morning of 
the 9th October,” says he, “when the waggons had started 
on their way to the Meristane River, our next stage, I turned 
off the road in pursuit of a troop of Brindled Gnoos, and pre- 
Sently came upon another, which was joined by a third still 
larger, and then by a vast herd of Zebras, and again by more 
Gnoos, with Sassabys and Hartebeests, pouring down from 
every quarter, until the landscape literally presented the ap- 
pearance of a moving mass of game. Their incredible num- 
bers so impeded their progress, that I had no difficulty in 
closing with them, dismounting as opportunity offered, firing 
both barrels of my rifle into the retreating phalanx, and 
leaving the ground strewed with the slain.” Again, in de- 
Scribing his further hunting in the country of the Meristane 
River,—“ We soon perceived large herds of Quageas and 
Brindled Gnoos, which continued to join each other, until the 
whole place seemed alive. The clatter of their hoofs was 
perfectly astounding; and I could compare it to nothing but 
the din of a tremendous charge of cavalry, or the rushing of 
& mighty tempest. I could not estimate the accumulated 
numbers at, less than 15,000, a great extent of country being 
actually chequered black and white with their congregated 
masses. As the panic caused by the report of our rifles ex- 
tended, clouds of dust hovered over them, and the long necks 
of troops of ostriches were also to be seen towering over the 
heads of their less gigantic neighbours, and sailing past with 
astonishing rapidity, Groups of purple Sassabys, and bril- 


liant red and yellow Hartebeests, likewise lent their aid to: 


complete the picture”? « The savages kept in our wake, 
dexterously despatching the wounded Gnoos by a touch on 


the spine with the point of an assagai, and instantly cover- 
ing up the carcasses with bushes to secure them from the: 


cee i art eta 


— ons : eae a — _ ——— 
eae Senet iii ss. nd i anecangie 0 


452 THE HORSE. 


voracity of the vultures, which hung about us like specks in 
the firmament, and descended with the velocity of lightning, 
as each discharge of our artillery gave token of prey.” 
Turning from these scenes of life to the elevated deserts 
of Central Asia, we find another great region of the Horse, 
consisting of mi ghty chains of wild mountains, and boundless 
plains, often without a tree or a bush for hundreds of miles, 
where various species of Equide have been able to preserve 
themselves in the state of liberty from age to age. Of the 
species which inhabit this vast wilderness, now mostly com- 
prehended in the empires of Russia and China, one, known 
from early times, is the Wild or Cappadocian Mule of the 
Greeks, the Dziggithai of certain Tartar tribes, the Equus 
Hemionvus of modern naturalists. This creature was known 
to the Greeks, from his inhabiting the deserts of Asia Minor ; 
but the Greeks scarcely distinguished it from the Common 
Mule, terming both ‘yiovz, or Half-Ass, although some of 
them knew that the Wild Mule was fruitful, while the hybrid 
progeny of the Horse and Ass was barren. The Hemionus, 
intermediate, as it were, between the Asinine and Equine 
groups, has a wide range of place, but prevails in the more 
temperate parts of Central Asia, whence he extends westward 
towards the confines of Europe, eastward to China Proper, 
and southward into Caubul, Beloochistén, and the deserts 
beyond the Indus. His stature is that of the Mule, but he 


is more graceful and swift. His fur is of a bay or fawn 


colour, long in winter, but smooth and glossy in summer. 
He has a bushy mane, which extends from the nape to the 
withers, and his tail is terminated by a tuft of hairs about a 
foot in length. Like the Horse in the wild state, he lives in 
troops, migrating from place to place, mainly in the open 
plains, and rarely approaching the forest. The animals are 
hunted by the people of the desert for their skins and flesh. 
They have the senses of sight and smell in exquisite perfec- 
tion, and, when put to flight, they dart along with the swift- 
ness of the antelope. They can be tamed when taken young, 


ind 


- HISTORY. 453 


but when old, do not resign their natural wildness. They 
have been partially domesticated, and may even have been 
mixed in blood, in early times, with the Horses and Asses of 
certain countries, — _ ADE a 
Besides the Dziggithai, other species of Equide, exhibit- 
ing, in like manner, a class of characters intermediate. be- 
tween those of the Horse and Ass, appear to exist in the same 
regions. But, as yet, our information regarding them is too 
imperfect to allow us to include them amongst determined 
species. They seem to resemble the Hemionus, or to be 
identical with it. One has been found at the sources of the 
Kiang or Yong-ste river, in Thibet, scouring in herds along 
elevated plains, at the height of 16,000 feet above the level of 
the sea. This appears to be the animal described by Colonel 
Hamilton Smith, from an individual found in a livery stable 
in London. It.is described as being about three feet high at 
the withers, of a reddish colour, with a dark dorsal line, and 
streaks on the shoulder and limbs; as having a short tail, 
scantily supplied with long hair, an upright. mane, ears 
moderately short, the head graceful, and resembling that 
of an Arabian horse, with the shoulder, croup, and limbs 
asinine. . 
But of all the Liquide found in the wilds of Asia, that 
which the most interests us is the true or Common Horse, 
_ Equus Caballus. Wild Horses, it is known from the con- 
current testimony of many writers, existed in a former age 
in Europe. Herodotus mentions their existence in Thrace, 
Varro in Spain, Appian and other writers in different parts 
of the Roman dominions. They appear to have been found 
in some parts of Europe even up to the sixteenth century. 
Boece mentions them as amongst the “ Harts and other Wild 
Bestiall” found in Scotland in his day, and refers to the 


means by which the inhabitants were enabled to reclaim them ; 
and up to a later period, herds appear to have been kept by 
e manner of deer, for venison; 
at. thig day, a race of small wild horses, 


Polish nobles in parks, in th 
and in Corsica, 


Pin a ll rw 


a NR eee oe ke ere ee 


— 


454 THE HORSE. 


vicious and intractable, still lingers in the less accessible 
mountains. But with the progress of population and settle- 
ment in Europe, the Wild Horses, like the ancient Uri, were 
subdued, dispersed, and exterminated ; and they are now to 
be found only on the Asiatic side of the Volga, but stretching 
thence, over the boundless wilds of the interior, to the East- 
ern Ocean. But they are chiefly known to us as they are 
found in the Tartar dominions of Russia, where they are 
familiar to all the nomadic tribes, As they are presented to 
uS in a state of nature in these countries, they are far infe-_ 


rior in beauty and nobleness of form to the domesticated races. 
Their heads are large, thick, and very convex above the eyes. 
Their ears are long, habitually carried low, and hanging 


backwards. Their limbs are long, but stout; the muzzle is 
thick, and garnished with bristles ; and long hairs grow be- 
neath the jaws and under part of the neck. The mane is 
thick and bushy. The hair of the body is long and shaggy, 
and sometimes frizzled. It is usually brownish-dun, ap- 
proaching to a muddy cream-colour. These horses are gre- 
garious ; they are often observed in numbers of several hun- 
dreds together; but, for the most part, they are in little 
bands, under the guidance of a stallion. Their senses of 
smell and sight are acute. They are vigilant in a high de- 
gree, the stallions guarding the troop from surprise, They 
shun the presence of man; and, when alarmed, set off at 
speed, and are quickly lost in the distance, availing them- 
selves of the inequalities of the surface to conceal themselves 
in their flight. They are hunted by the people of the desert 
for their flesh and skins, and sometimes they are captured 
alive, chiefly in winter, when the snows arrest their progress, 
and allow them to be driven into hollows and ravines. In the 
neighbourhood of the Sea of Asoph are horses in the state of 
liberty, which Pallas supposes to be the descendants of Rus- 
sian horses employed at the siege of Asoph in 1697, and turned 
adrift for want of forage ; but, although emancipated horses 
are doubtless to be found here, as well as in the remoter de- 


HISTORY. 455 


serts, they are readily distinguished by the natives from the 
true Wild Horses, by the more varied colour of their fur, 
their tamer habits in the state of liberty, and the greater 
facility with which, when captured, they can be reduced to 
servitude. aces 

Of the Wild Horses of Africa, our knowledge is. less pre- 
cise than of those of Asia. In the range of mountains which 
may be said to bound the basin of the Mediterranean on the 
south, is found a race of small Horses, first, it is believed, 
made known by Shaw, under the name Coomrie, applied to 
them by the Moors or Negroes. They are from 10 to 11 
hands high at the shoulder, usually of a reddish colour, with- 
out any dorsal streak. They have the head broad at the 
forehead, short, and narrowing much to the muzzle, the 
ears wide, the eyes small, the hair long and woolly down to 
the eyebrows, the mane black, the tail clothed with a short 
fur at its commencement, and terminating with a tuft of 
long black hair. This creature is exceedingly swift and 
wild, taking refuge in woody coverts, and baffling pursuit. 
It is not known whether it has been subjected to domestica- 
tion. It may, perhaps, be one of the Wild Horses of Africa, 
referred to by the Roman writers, and which were brought 
to the shows of the amphitheatre. 

Of other Wild Horses in Africa, we have merely the pass- 
ing notices of writers and travellers. Leo Africanus men- 
tions their existence, and describes them as being of a dusky- 
gray colour, with short manes and tails. Wild Horses have 
likewise been seen towards Cape Verde; and Mungo Park 
states, that he met with a troop of them near Ludamar, 
which fled at his approach, snorting and looking behind 
them ; but he gives ug no further details. Thus meagre is 
our knowledge of the unsubdued horses of Africa; but we 
ae remember, that the African region, which, of all others, 
is likely = ws the habitat of native horses, is as yet un- 
— to civilized man, namely, the great range of moun- 
tains and elevated terraces, rising, in some parts, to the 


456 THE HORSE. 


regions of snow, which appear to stretch across the Conti- 
nent, from the high lands of Abyssinia, until they terminate 
towards the pestilential shores of the Atlantic. 

From one or more of the wild of the species, whether of 
Africa, Asia, or Europe, must be supposed to be derived 
those innumerable varieties of the Horse which have been 
subjected to human power. Whether those varieties are to 
be regarded as a single species, or as several, depends upon 
the meaning which we attach to our terms. If we include, 
under the same specific type, all the characters presented by 
the domesticated varieties, of colour and external form, then 
all the subjugated horses are of one species, just as all the 
varieties of the human race are of one species. But, adinit- 
ting that all the subjugated as well as wild horses are 
specifically the same, which it is most consonant with our 
ideas of natural classification to admit, the question still 
arises, whether all Horses have been originally placed in one 
region of the globe, or in more than one? for, as has been 
before observed, we are not entitled to assume that the like 
Species may not have been called into existence in different 
parts of the world, either at the same or at different periods. 
We may either suppose, then, that the Horse, descended 
from a single pair or family, was produced in some spot of 
earth, whence he has been diffused, as from a common centre, 
to all the parts of the earth which he inhabits; or that he 
has been called forth in different parts of the earth’s surface, 
whence he has been diffused, as from different centres. If we 
shall decide in favour of the former opinion, namely, that all 
the Horses of the world have descended from a single pair or 
family, and been dispersed from some one spot on the earth’s 
surface, then we may amuse our fancy by conjecturing where 
this favoured spot is, whether in Central Asia, where the 
animal so abounds, or on the banks of the Euphrates, whence 
we believe our own species to have been dispersed, or in the 
valley of the Nile, where we first hear of chariots of war, or 
‘in Arabia, as some naturalists have maintained, or at the 


HISTORY. 457 


sources of the Indus, as the Hindoos assert, or, for any 
thing we know, in the mountains of the Moon, which the 
Negroes may, with equal reason, believe: and then, having 
indulged our imagination with finding out the spot where 
the first pair of Horses was called forth, we may exercise 
our ingenuity in devising means for enabling them to trans- 
port themselves, without the aid of wings, to so many dis- 


tant regions. But, in truth, the origin of the Horse does \ 
not admit of determination by any facts known to us; and 
we have merely to consider whether it be more consonant | 
with reasonable probabilities that all the Horses of the world | 
have been produced in one spot, and spread from a common | 
centre, or have been placed ab origine, that is, from the com- / 
mencement of the present zoological distribution of animals, / 


in the regions proper to them. . 3 

_ From whatever regions we may suppose the Horse to have 
been derived, we know that, from early times, he has been 
subjected to human control. We read of him in the earliest 
annals of the Hast, as typical of power and splendour, as 
harnessed to the chariot of the Sun, as a sign in the firma- 
ment, and as the object of adoration and sacrifice to mortals 
below. The first great conquerors of the regions beyond the 
Sinde, whom we call Hindoos, proceeded, there is reason to 
believe, from near the western termination of the great Hi- 
malaya Mountains, where the most ancient and refined of 
written languages, the Sanscrit, still lingers in the speech of 
the people. We may suppose them to have been a nation of 
horsemen and charioteers; and they themselves, in their le- 
gends, derive the great river which has given name to their 
country from the mouth of a Horse. Proceeding westward, 
we have the first accounts of great empires, the Assyrian, 
the Babylonian, and the Persian, where, as récords, sacred 
and profane, inform us, the Horse, with Chariots of War, 
existed from the first ages. Proceeding still westward, and 


nearly aa the same Parallel of latitude, we reach a kingdom. 
of Africa, where the Horge was subdued from the earliest 


LAD ih A ne Ptr EME 


7 ay Rn geaennrae, 4 


lil “Sittin alll cei ELE A SEE ns Naeetticanoeeen, 


458 THE HORSE. 


ages, and where marvellous monuments, which have sur: 
vived the lapse of thousands of years, and all the ravages of 
war and barbarism, attest the early subjugation of the ani- 
mal. 

In innumerable sculptures, as fresh as if they had been 
chiselled yesterday, the Horse of the Egyptians appears as 
harnessed to the chariots of their warriors and kings; and 
all the history of the country shews how much it depended 
upon his power in war. Although the Egyptians were not 
ignorant of the use of cavalry, for we learn that they had 
their horsemen as well as charioteers, yet, like the other 
civilized nations of the same era,—the Greeks, the Hindoos, 
the Persians and other Asiatics,—they gave the preference to 
the chariot, which consisted of a light low carriage, open be- 
hind, containing the charioteer and the combatant, having a 
shaft or beam, and drawn by two or more horses yoked 
abreast. 


From the records of the J ewish history we receive notices 
of the horses of the Egyptians; and from the same docu- 


HISTORY. 459 


ments we learn, that the ancestors of the Israelites were 


not possessed of horses when they dwelt in the plains of 


Syria. When Abraham sent his servant from ‘Palestine to 
Mesopotamia to bring a wife for his son Isaac, the man 
announces himself to Laban, the brother of Rebecca, thus: 
‘Iam Abraham’s servant, and the Lord hath blessed my 
master greatly, and he is become great; and he hath given 
him flocks and herds, and silver and gold, and men-servants 
and maid-servants, and camels and asses.” No mention is 
made of the Horse, nor, in the Subsequent enumeration of 
the treasures of Isaac, is the Horse once spoken of. And 
when Jacob returned from Mesopotamia to the land of his 
kindred, he had oxen and sheep, and goats and asses, and 
camels, but no horses. In a later age, the descendants of 
Jacob multiplied in a district of Egypt, lying between the 
Nile and the Red Sea, whence their great legislator con- 
ducted them to the country which they were to render their 
own. During their long abode of more than four hundred 
years in the land of Egypt, they retained the habits of their 
ancestors in what regarded the Horse. ~ In the law which 


_they were required to obey, reference is made to the Ass, in 


order to denounce its flesh as unclean, to condemn the sin 
of coveting it when it belonged to a neighbour, and to com- 
mand that it should be suffered to rest from its labours on 


the Sabbath-day; but no allusion is made to the Horse as" 


a part of the goods of the people. Nay, it is an injunction 
to them, that they shall not possess themselves of this ani- 
mal in the land to which they were journeying. This rocky 
and limited territory was then, as it is now, little suited to 
the rearing of the Horse, and never could be so well defend- 
ed by cavalry ag by infantry ; and it is a historical fact, that 
the Jews were never so successful in war as when they trust- 
ed to the latter arm, ag in the earlier period of their history, 
and ata subsequent age, during the glorious Struggle of the 
Maccabees. Moses, with a prescient knowledge of the na- 


ture of the country which was to be subdued, discourages 


t 
; 
§ 


Sa SSR eter tar 


460 THE HORSE. 


the cultivation of an instrument of war which other nations 
valued so highly. He counsels the people, when they go to 
battle, to have no fear of the horses and chariots of their 
enemies ; but to put their trust in the God of Israel, who 
had brought them from the land of Egypt. He directs the 
future ruler of the country not to multiply horses in the 
land, and so literally was the order obeyed, that it became 
the practice to hough the horses which were made prize of 
in the field. King David, on one occasion, in which he took 
700 horses and 1000 chariots, hamstrung them all except 
100 of the chariot horses which he reserved. He speaks 
with a proud disdain of horses as an instrument of war, and 
represents them as employed only by the enemies of his 
country. But the restraints of custom and the laws were 
soon broken through, and Solomon formed a numerous body 
of cavalry and chariots. He even established a regular trade 
in horses with Africa, and supplied the neighbouring country 
with those of Kgypt. Further, it is remarkable, that when 
the Jews entered Palestine from the south, they encountered 
no horses ; for no mention is made of cavalry during the first 

campaign of Joshua. The Philistines alone possessed horses 
in the south of Syria, and they seem to have been an Egyp- 
tian colony. Nay, it appears that Arabia, and all the coun- 
tries stretching from Palestine to the Persian Gulf, were at 
that time destitute of horses. When the Midianites, an 
Arabian nation, were subdued, the spoil consisted of sheep, 
oxen, and human captives, but no horses are mentioned. 
When, in the reign of Saul, a war was carried on with cer- 
tain Arabian nations on the Persian Gulf, the spoil consisted 
of slaves, of camels, of sheep, and asses ; and in an attack 
on Judea by the Midianites, in a subsequent age, they came, 
we are told, “ with their cattle and their tents; and they 
came as locusts for multitude ;? and no mention is made of 
horses. And in the remarkable account of the trade of Tyre 
given by the Prophet Hzekiel, we learn that the trade in 
horses and mules was with them “ of the house of Togar- 


HISTORY, © 461 


mah ;” but that the trade with the Arabians and all the 


‘princes of Kedar, was in “ Lambs, and Rams, and Goats.” 


Although the Jews, on their first entrance into Palestine 
from the south, encountered no horses, yet, no sooner did 
they come into contact with the nations to the north, than 
they were met by warlike enemies possessed of horses and 
chariots. But these nations approached the countries of the 
great region of the Asiatic Horse, whence, doubtless, they 
derived their horses, and not from Africa, with which they 
could have no intercourse, nor from Arabia, which had no 


_ horses. We must come, then, to the conclusion, that Arabia, 


and the southern deserts of Syria, were not countries of the 
subjugated horse at a period posterior to the historical era, 
and must be supposed to have derived the horses which 
they possessed in a subsequent age, not from the south, but 
from the great Officina Equorum in the north. It was from 
contiguity to this region of the Horse that the great empires 
of Assyria and Persia so early became nations of conquerors 
and horsemen; and we may believe that the people of Nor- 
thern Syria derived the horses with which they encountered 
Joshua and the Jewish infantry from the same source. From 
other documents we learn that Asia Minor, from the earliest 
times, was a country of horses; and these, we must believe, 
were derived from the north, and not from the south. The 
conclusion, further, which we may draw from these histo- 
rical notices, sacred and profane, is, that the Egyptians de- 
rived their horses from the vast continent which they them- 
selves inhabited, rather than from a region from which they 
were Separated by a tract of country in which the Horse did 
not exist in the first ages. In the high lands of Central 


_ Africa, at this day and for ages, are the Gallas, and innume- 


rable tribes of nomadic horsemen, whose horses we have as’ 
much reason to regard as indigenous to Africa as those 
which inhabit the wilds of Tartary are to Asia; and we may 
reasonably believe, that the Horse, like other animals fitted 


isirlicatid sp cal nals ra ac a — — 


462 THE HORSE. — 


to yield up their powers to human service,—the Goat, the’ 
Sheep, the Ox, and the Hog,—was acquired and subdued in 
different parts of the world where he was found. 

The Horse, as he is presented to us in the state of domes- 
tication, is not more remarkable for the grace and nobleness 
of his form, for his strength, agility, and swiftness, for his 
boldness and spirit, than for the docility with which he re- 
signs his vast powers to the service of mankind. The sub- 
jection of this noble creature is complete ; but it is not the 
degradation of unwilling bondage, but the instinctive sur- 
render of physical powers for the purposes for which they 
were given. If we can read design at all in the functions of 
the animal economy, we must believe that the Horse, how- 
ever we may have abused his powers, has been formed for 
the service of mankind, and has had the faculties assigned 
to him which are fitted for that end. Hig vast Strength, his 
courage, his powers of rapid progression, would avail us 
nothing, were he not endowed with a temperament which 
causes him to submit his actions to the control of superior 
reason. Were he like the Zebra of the African mountains, 
or the Dziggithai of Tartary, he would be the subject of per- 
secution and the chase, instead. of being an instrument of 
civilization, by augmenting our means of mutual intercourse, 
and increasing our. command over the objects which surround 
us. Nature has not formed this powerful creature to shun 
entirely the control of man, but has linked him by his natural 
wants and instincts to our society ; and it is only when under 
human guidance that his most useful faculties are exercised, 
and that his full maturity of Strength and form is attained. 

The Horse is distinguished from all the others of the 
Equine genus, by the superior expansion of his chest, the 
larger development of his muscles, the greater strength and 
lateral distance of his limbs, the elevation of his withers, the 
long and flowing hairs of his mane and tail, and his loud and 
sonorous voice. His hoofs are round at the base, whereas, 


HISTORY. | 463 


in the asinine group, the soles of the hoof are oval. He is 
herbivorous, and delights in the fruits of the gramineous and 
leguminous plants,—as of the oat, the wheat, the maize, the 
rice, the bean, the pea. He partakes, too, of succulent roots 
and tubers, and in some cases even will eat of animal food. 

He prefers soft water, as that of rivers, nay, of standing 
- pools, to the hard water of springs. His stomach is of me- 
dium size, but the cecum is very large; and, though he 
seeks food frequently, he can endure considerable abstinence, 
but less than the Ass, the Mule, and the Camel. He can 
rest from fatigue, and enjoy sleep, in the standing posture. 
_ At the age of two years he is able to propagate his race ; and 
at the age of five he has arrived at the full maturity of youth. 
_ The male is a more powerful and courageous animal than the © 
female, more ardent in his temper, more difficult of subjuga- 
tion, but not less attached and generous. His neighing is 
more loud, sonorous, and frequent, and his action is more 
noble. ‘When deprived of his virile powers, he approaches 
more to the character of the female; and although his 
Strength, ardour, and noble carriage are lessened, he retains 
enough of these characters to fit him for every service, and 
becomes more gentle, tractable, and safe. The female goes 
with young eleven months, but with some variation, beyond 
the medium term, dependent upon food and temperament. 
The foal is born with long limbs, which enables it to reach 
the mamme of the mother. It has considerable strength 
even at the birth, and is soon able to follow the dam at 
Speed, and learns to take solid food by her side. In the fifth 
or sixth month it ig able to dispense with the milk of the 
mother, and may be separated from her without injury to its 
growth. 

The brain of the Horse ig small; but he manifests in a 
sufficient degree the Sagacity which fits him for his condition. 
His sense of sight is moderately acute, and he has the faculty 
of seeing well in the dark ; but the deficiency in the sense 

of touch at his extremities, which are defended by thick horn, 


464 THE HORSE. — 


renders him not always sensible of the nature of the objects 
which are presented to him, on which account he is easily 
startled at the sight of what is unusual. His sense of hear- 
ing is good, and his large external ear is readily turned to col- 
lect distant sounds. He is cheered by the voice of his rider, 
and certain sounds give him pleasure, as the tones of distant 
music, the baying of the hounds when he has been used to 
the chase, and the noise of rejoicing and triumph. 

His memory is tenacious with regard to localities. He re- 
members the path which he has once travelled after a long 
interval, the place at which he is accustomed to feed, and 
the tanks and pools at which he has quenched his thirst. A 
horse lost in the desert of Southern Africa, has been known 
to find his way for 500 miles to his native farm. He has the 
faculty, like the Camel, of discovering water in the distance ; 
and hence he has sometimes been able to save the life of the 
sinking traveller. 

The horse is fond of caresses, and susceptible of attach- 
ment in a high degree. The Arabs, who never beat their 
horses, but treat them like the children of the tent, often owe 
their lives to their gentleness and fidelity. The Desert- 
Horse, so full of fire, should his master fall wounded or faint- 
ing from the saddle, will stand by him till he rise, and neigh 
for assistance, will shelter him from the burning sands of the 
desert, stand over him during the glare of noon, and stretch 
himself on the ground beside him when the dews of night 
begin to fall. Major Denham thus speaks of his feelings on 

the loss of a favourite Arab in the heart of Africa :-— “The 
horse that carried me from Tripoli to Mourzuk, and back 
again, and on which I had ridden the whole journey from 
Tripoli to Bornou, had died a few hours after- my departure 
from the latter. There are situations in a man’s life in which 
losses of this nature are felt most keenly, and this was one 
of them. It was not grief, but it was something very nearly 
approaching to it; and though I felt ashamed of the degree 
of derangement which I have suffered from it, yet it was se- 


8 


| 


. HISTORY, ; 465 


veral days before I could get over the loss. Let it be, how- 


ever, remembered, that the poor animal had been my support 


and comfort,—may I not Say companion,—through many a 
dreary day and night ;—had endured both hunger and thirst 
in my service with the utmost patience ; was so docile, though 
an Arabian, that he would stand still for hours in the desert, 


while I slept between his legs, his body affording me the only 


Shelter that could be obtained from the powerful influence of 
& noon-day sun,.’’* 

The Horse manifests Sensibly the pleasure which he feels 
in the presence of those who treat him with kindness. The 
Turks, who use their horses with a humanity which they do 
not always exhibit towards their fellow-creatures, may be 


sometimes seen followed by their fiery chargers as if they 


were household friends. Sometimes the Horse forms strong 
attachment to other animals which may have been useful to 
him, or which may have remained with him in his stall to 
cheer his solitude. Dogs are frequent favourites,—nay, 


other animals less likely to form the subject of attachment. 


Chillaby, a very ferocious race-horse, took an affection for a 
lamb which used to employ itself in butting away the flies, 
The Godolphin Barb formed an attachment to a cat, who 
used to sit upon his back when in the stable, or nestle close 
to him when he lay down; and the affection was mutual, for, 
on the death of the horse, the cat refused to take food, pined 
away, and died. 

As the Horge is susceptible of kindness, so is he resentful 
of wrongs. A foal that has been cruelly treated remembers, 
when he has arrived at his full strength, the person that had 
injured him, and Sometimes endeavours to avenge the wrong. 
A fine Cleveland Bay, who was noted for the Sweetness of 
his temper, had on geyera] occasions been maltreated by a 
strange groom. Once an unmerited blow was given on the 
head, when the indignant animal raised his fore-foot, and 


* Travels of Major Denham and Captain Clapperton, 


26 


ane “= Freee a SE nat in isang ce 


466 THE HORSE. 


struck the offender dead in an instant, but never afterwards 
shewed any symptoms of vice. The following singular story 
is related by Mr Rolle, a gentleman of Devonshire :—A cer- 
tain person of rank conceived the cruel idea of tiring out a 
favourite hunter. After a long chase in the forenoon he 
dined, mounted the horse again, took him to the hills, and 
galloped him furiously, until the faithful creature had nearly 


sunk down from exhaustion. On his being brought to the 
stable, the groom shed tears at seeing the condition of his 
poor favourite. The rider himself, some time afterwards, 
came into the stable, but the insulted horse, languishing and 
overcome as he was, sprung upon the wretch, and, but for 
the attendants, would have put him to death. Even harsh 
language used to a horse in the stall will cause his pulse to 


rise many beats in the minute. 

The Horse is susceptible of the feelings of pride and 
rivalry. In triumphal processions and displays of parade, 
he manifests distinctly the pleasure which he feels in his gay 
and glittering caparisons. In the race-course, the Spectators 
are able to observe the ardour of the rival horses, the im- 
patience with which they wait the moment of starting, the 
spirit with which they press onward in the contest of speed. 
It is manifestly less the terrors of the whip and spur, than 
the passions which the contest itself engenders, that call’ 
forth the exertion of the animals’ powers. When the struggle 
reaches the crisis, life or death seems to depend on victory. 
A fine horse called Forester, known on the turf as having 
been the victor in many well-contested races, found himself 


on one occasion closely matched by a younger rival. The 
latter began to gain ground ; the horses at length ran side 
by side, neck by neck, when Forester, finding his strength 
failing, and his rival about to pass him, made a desperate 
spring, seized his competitor by the jaw to hold him back, 
and could scarcely be forced to quithis grasp. In those ruder 
kinds of races, in which horses without riders are matched 
- against one another, the rivalship is more apparent to the 


HISTORY. 467 


Spectators, though not perhaps more keenly felt by the com- 
batants. Ancient writers give us examples, from the games 
of the Hippodrome, in which horses, deprived by accident of 
their riders, pursued the course, and came in the conquerors. 
The Horse shares even the feelings of his master, and enters - 
with joy into hig pursuits. Who that has seen the hunter in 
the fields has not marked the fire which lights up his eye, the 
eagerness with which he pricks up his ears, and listens to 
the voice of the pack, the courage with which he Surmounts 
the obstacles opposed to him, and the ardour with which he. 
pursues the sport! Nay, not only in the pastimes which 
suit his spirit and love of action, but in the sterner pursuits 
of his master, is this gentle and generous creature formed 
to take a part. N othing seems more foreign to the very na- 
ture of such a creature than martial strife and the shedding 
of human blood ; yet when, alas, has been the age in which 
the Horse has not been made the instrument of cruelty and 
bloodshed, and not even, it would appear, the unwilling in- 
Strument, for his gentle nature seems to adapt itself to the 
purpose to which he ig rendered subservient, and he becomes 
fierce and cruel because his master wills it so! He shares 
the fatigues of war, delights in the noise of arms, and braves — 
the shock of combat and the danger of wounds. “ Hast thou 
Siven the Horse spirit ? has thou clothed his neck with thun- 
der? Canst thou make him bound like the locust? The 
glory of hig nostrils ig terrible: He paweth in the valley, 
and rejoiceth in his Strength: He goeth on to meet the 
armed men: He mocketh at fear and trembleth not; neither 
turneth he back from the sword. The quiver rattleth against 
him, the glittering Spear and the shield. He swalloweth the 
ground with fiercenegs and rage. He believeth not at first 
that it is the Sound of the trumpet which he heareth ; but at 
the full blast of the trumpet he crieth ha! ha! and smelleth 
the battle afar off, the thunder of the captains and the shout- 


a 


nN 


468 THE HORSE. . 


by the agencies of food and climate, and, it may be, by other 
causes unknown to us. He sustains the temperature of the 
most burning regions ; but there is a degree of cold at which 
he cannot exist; and, as he approaches to this limit, his tem- 
perament and external conformation are affected. In Ice- 
land, at the arctic circle, he has become a dwarf; in Lap- 
land, at latitude 65°, he has given place to the Rein-deer ; 


\ and in Kamtschatka, at latitude 52°, he has given place to 
| the Dog. As he approaches to the limit of his natural habi- 
| tat, he loses much of the fiery spirit and swiftness which he 
| possessed in more genial climes. He may be hardy, saga- 
| cious, and enduring; but he needs the whip and the spur, 
| and is rarely roused to continued action by his natural energy 
» and love of motion. The nature and abundance of his food, 


too, greatly affect his character and form. A country of 
heaths and innutritious herbs will not produce a horse so 
large and strong as one of plentiful herbage. ‘The horse of 
the mountains will be smaller than that of the plains, the 


horse of the sandy desert than the inhabitant of the watered 
valley. By a combination of these, and, it may be, of other 
less apparent agencies, the Horse, like the Ox, the Sheep, 
and other creatures formed for the companionship of man, 
becomes suited to the conditions under which he is called to 


exist. In the mountains of the colder countries he is small, 
hardy, short, and muscular in his limbs, and covered with 
abundant hair. Such is the little horse of Norway, of a great 


part of Sweden, and other mountainous countries of the north 


of Europe. In countries of abundant herbage, such as Hol- 
stein, Jutland, Flanders, he becomes enlarged in his form, 
and fitted for the exercise of physical strength, with a dimi- 
nution of the powers of speed. When he passes into coun- 
tries where, from the heat of the climate, his natural food is 
burned up for a part of the year, he becomes of smaller bulk, 
and suited to subsist on scantier food. Thus, the horses of 
the south of Europe are of lighter form, and more easily 
nourished, than those of England and other countries where 


HISTORY. 469 


grasses are abundant; and this change of character still 
more appears when we have passed into Africa, or the sandy 
deserts of Asia. There the light and agile horse of the 


desert shews himself to be adapted to the scantier nourish- 


ment on which he must subsist. The heavy horse of Eng- ) 
land and the plains of Germany could no more subsist on the 
herbs of the sands of Tripoli than on the heaths of Lapland. 


He would perish in such circumstances, did not Nature pro- 


vide the remedy, by adapting him to his condition. 

The colour of the hair of the Horse varies with causes 
which we are unable to trace. Certain races exhibit a ten- 
dency to certain colours, and retain them with surprising 
constancy. A common colour of the domesticated Horse is 


brown, of various shades, from light dun and chestnut to E 
bay. In various countries, from the Gulf of Bothnia to the \ 


islands of the Indian Seas, are found horses of a mouse-dun 
colour, with dark manes and tails, and a dark streak along 


i ial 


the spine, and sometimes even a cross at the shoulder. | 


Sometimes Horses are milk-white, of which colour are many 
of the finest horses of Asia Minor, Persia, and the deserts of 
Syria. These cream-coloured Horses have been held in 
esteem in every age, and regarded as the fitting steeds.of the 
chariots of kings and heroes. The Circassian chiefs appro- 
priated them to these uses; and at this day some splendid re- 
giments of Russian cavalry are mounted upon them. Often 
the fur is clouded, of which the most common variety is gray ; 
and sometimes it is brown upon a white ground, as in a 
beautiful race found in the western termination of the Him- 
alaya Mountains in Caubul; and sometimes the different 
colours are distinct, as in the variety termed piebald, a cha- 
racter which remarkably distinguishes the mountain ponies 
of parts of High Asia. The black colour is distinctive of 
certain races of Europe, as those of Flanders and the fens of 
England ; it is common, too, in Africa, but rare in Arabia 
and the countries of the Hast, It is a common aphorism 
of jockeys, that a good horse is never of a bad colour ; but 


ae ase gibt se mancnrne 
ee 2 2 ry nA any it we oti a 9 


470 THE HORSE. . 


yet colour is looked to, as it may gratify the taste, discrimi- 
nate certain races, or denote the care bestowed in selection 
and breeding. 

_ Looking to the Horses of different countries, we find them 
distinguished in every degree, by size, form, hardihood, the 
power of speed, and other qualities. The Horses of Africa, 
like the human inhabitants, present characters proper to 
the region they inhabit. They are distinguished from the 
Asiatic horses by their longer limbs, and by their smaller 
girth at the loins. They more resemble the foal at the side 
of its dam, than the more matured form of the Horse of 
Western Asia. They are very fleet, and patient of thirst 
and hunger. ‘They have a high and graceful action, and 
present much of that peculiar motion which every one will 
understand who observes the movements of a foal, which, it 
is to be observed, is an exceedingly fleet animal in propor- 
tion to its strength and size. The race most characteristic 
of the African form is found in Nubia and the adjoining de- 
serts. The district of Dongola, lying about 20° of north 
latitude, has been traversed by various travellers, and the 

, horses have been described. They are mostly of a black 
colour, or black with white legs. They stand about sixteen 
hands high, and, contrary to the form of the Asiatic horse, 

* their height is greater than their length from the neck back- 


ward. They are described by travellers as forming the most 
splendid | cavalry in the world. Bruce, who was a skilful 
horseman, speaks of them with admiration, and states that 
they are docile and full of spirit. Bossman gives a similar 
testimony, extolling their beauty, their symmetry, and their 
docile and affectionate tempers. Some of them used to bring 
enormous prices at Cairo. They have now become common 
in that city, where they are to be seen ridden by persons 
who prefer their high and showy action to the more useful 
pace of the Arabian. It cannot but be regarded as remark- 
able, that.a race of such tall and powerful horses should be 
produced in one of the most steril countries on the globe. 


HISTORY. roe a 


The Arabian horse, in the same latitudes, scarce exceeds the 
size of a pony ; which leads us to the conclusion that the 
African horse is distinct from the Asiatic, attaining his maxi- 


‘mum of development, like the negro race of mankind, under 


conditions of temperature and natural’ productions entirely 
different from those which favour the growth of the Asiatic 


Species. How far this remarkable race of horses extends into 


the burning regions of the interior we are ignorant, on ac- 
count of our imperfect knowledge of these countries ; but the 
same general form of the animal has been observed in Bornou, 
in the very heart of the Continent ; and we have reason to 
believe, from the notices of travellers, that the horses in the 
countries extending westward have much of the same charac- 
ter of lightness of body, and high and imposing action. Travel- 
lers who have visited Abyssinia, which, however, is a country 
of mountains, and therefore fitted to produce a small race 
of horses, speak of them as possessing the proud aspect and 
action of the horses of the Nubian deserts. Bruce describes 
a favourite black horse which he himself rode, and with whose 
action and demeanour he expresses himself charmed. It is 
probable that the horses of Africa, as we depart from this 
centre, deviate from the parent type. . Passing through the 
boundless countries of the N egroes to the south, the Horse 
Seems at length to disappear ; and towards the countries of 
the coast of Guinea, which differ greatly in their character 
from the Nubian deserts, he appears to degenerate. We 
learn, however, that horses exist in vast numbers through- 
out all the interior, from the Red Sea to the Gulf of Benin, 


- and that they are everywhere used for the purposes of war, 


of pomp, and of racing. But the horses of Africa, with which 
we are most familiar in Europe, and which have been largely 
mixed in blood with the horses of Southern Europe, and even 
of England, are those which inhabit the countries of Africa 
north of the desert of Sahara. They are termed Barbs, and 
they inhabit the kingdoms of Fez, Morocco, and all the coun- 
tries eastward to the deserts bordering on Egypt. 


472 THE HORSE. . 


The country of the Barbs approaching in its geographical 
situation to Kurope, it may be supposed that the horses, like 
the human inhabitants, approach nearer in their characters 
to the Huropean varieties. But this affinity has been in- 
creased by an admixture of races from early times. First, 
by means of the Phoenician colonies; secondly, by the long 
‘subjugation of the countries of the coast to the Republic and 
Empire of Rome; and thirdly, and far more extensively, by 
the conquests of the Arabs, who settled in great numbers in 
the country, and now form a large proportion of the inhabi- 
tants. Notwithstanding of this admixture, the character of 
the horses of Barbary indicates distinctly their African lin- 
eage. ‘They are about fourteen and a half hands high. They 
are sufficiently deep at the girth, but tucked up in the, belly, 
giving that peculiar greyhound aspect which is characteris- 
tic of this race. Their necks are long and well-formed, their 
heads moderately fine, the chafron tending to the convex ; 
their shoulders are oblique, and the withers thin and well 
raised. Their limbs, though thin and delicate, are sinewy ; 
their pasterns are oblique, and the feet well formed. They 
are gentle and full of spirit; they are somewhat careless in 
their paces, but distinguished by their graceful action. -As 
compared with the Arabians, they are more swift, but less 
enduring, and their breeding and training have not been at- 
tended to with the same care. The Moors, though admirable 
horsemen, are harsh to their horses, as compared with the 
Arabians and Western Asiatics. They use tremendous bits, 
and the sharp edges of their stirrups serve the purpose of 
spurs. These countries were of old inhabited by the Mauri- 
tanians, the Numidians, the Getulians, and other nations of 
horsemen. The horses were known and valued for their fleet- 
ness before the Asiatic horse had found its way across the 
Syrian wastes, and a thousand years and more before the 
warlike soldiers of the Prophet had issued from their native 
deserts. In the ages of the Roman empire, they were car- 
ried to Italy to give swiftness te the horses employed in the 


HISTORY. 473 


Sports of the Circus. They were mixed largely in blood with 
the horses of Sicily and Spain ; and, ina subsequent age, they 
contributed to give its peculiar characters to the race-horse 
of England. The finest of the Barbary horses have been de- 
rived from the countries of the coasts of Fez, Morocco, and 
Tripoli. Those of the interior, on the confines of the Great 
Desert, are described as of a smaller size, but as being swift, 
and wonderfully patient of thirst, hunger, and toil. Some of 
them in the inland mountains of Morocco are said to be of 
matchless endurance, to be swift,—swallowers of the wind, as 
they are termed,—but to droop and die when brought to the 
countries on the sea, and deprived of their habitual aliment. 

Turning from the regions of the swift and agile Horse of 
Africa to the countries of the Euxine and Caspian Seas, we 
find the animal reared under different conditions, and exhi- 
biting a different class of characters. He is here of a robuster 
form, with broader chest and more muscular limbs. He is 
superior in strength of body to the slender African, but infe- 
tior in speed. His bearing is more bold, his aspect more 
noble. He is capable of tasks to which the strength of the 
African is unsuited ; but he requires a larger supply of food, 
and would sink under the thirst and slender nourishment on 
which the other can subsist. This race is found in perfec- 
tion in the countries near the Caucasus, in Armenia, and 
other parts of Asia Minor. The Circassians, amongst the 
western Asiatics, are noted for the beauty and excellence of 
their horses. Thege warlike mountaineers have their breeds 
of noble blood, on which they set an extreme value. They 
brand them by peculiar marks, as a horse-shoe, an arrow, a 
lance, the imitation of which they punish as a capital crime. 
The Turcomans possess horses of great strength and power, 
fy for war and the chase ; and likewise the Kurds, who have 
m every #8 Maintained their liberties. It is from the same 
countries that the Turks derived that splendid cavalry with 
which they subdued the neighbouring nations. Recurring to 
the happier ages when Asia Minor was covered with cities 


474 THE WORSE. - 


and the monuments of civilization, we find that it was distin- 
guished for its horses as for all its productions. Armenia 
supplied with horses and mules the merchant princes of Sidon 
and Tyre ; and, in a subsequent age, the horses of the same 
countries are described by Vegetius and other writers as 
being a race tall and beautiful. Homer, nearly a thousand 
years before the Christian era, speaks of the horses of the 
same countries as yoked to the chariots of his heroes; and, 
at a subsequent period, the horses of Cappadocia, Phrygia, 
and the neighbouring states, furnished steeds to contend in 
the Olympic games of Greece. Now the fertile regions of 
. Asia Minor are laid desolate. The glory of its twenty na- 
tions has passed away like a dream. Ages of tyranny and 
misrule have marred the image of the lovely land, and left 
_ us but the recollection of its former happiness. Its arts have 
disappeared with the palaces of its kings and the tombs of 
its heroes. If its noble horses still survive, though deprived 
of their ancient glory, this is because the tyranny of man has 
not been able wholly to destroy the bounties of nature in her 
animal productions. All the horses of the countries referred 
to, although varying in Strength and size with the fertility 
of the districts they inhabit, exhibit a common class of cha- 
racters. 

To the southward, we enter the deserts of Syria and Me- 
sopotamia, and the arid wilderness of Arabia. Of all: the 
countries of the East, Arabia has become the most celebrated 
for its horses. This wild and barren country, however, does 
not seem to have acquired the Horse until the less remote 
periods of its history. The Camel, the Ox, the Sheep, the 
Goat, afforded the inhabitants of old, as at the present day, 
their chief means of subsistence. The Horse appears to 
have been added as their habits became more predatory. 
Their contact with Persia, and the countries of the Horse on 
the north, put it in their power to obtain horses; and they 
acquired them, just as we see tribes of Savages in modern 
times possess themselves of fire-arms, which they use for 


HISTORY, 475 


mutual destruction or defence. No records exist to shew at 

what era the Arabians began to use horses, but it appears that 

they were little multiplied in the country till after the Chris- 

tian era. Even in the reign of Tiberius Cesar, Strabo states, 

of the south of Arabia, then termed Arabia Felix, that it had 

neither horses nor mules; and regarding the north of Arabia, 

or Arabia Deserta, he says that it had no horses, and that 

camels supplied their place. The warlike successors of Ma- 

homet became horsemen, and laid the countries of the Horse 

in the East under contribution; but up to the age of the 

Prophet himself, the horses of the country were neither nu- 

_ merous nor generally diffused. On his advance to Mecca, 

to take vengeance on his enemies of the Koreish, he had 

only two horses in his army ; and in the list of plunder which | 
he carried back with him, while there were camels, sheep, | 
silver, and human captives, not a single horse is mentioned. 
When once, however, the Horse was added to the domesti- 
cated animals of this eager and wandering people, the gift 
was cultivated with boundless care. With them the Horse 
acquired a value which it could scarcely anywhere else pos- 
Sess. Not luxury and enjoyment alone depended on their 
horses, but liberty and life; and they acquired a love and 
regard for the animal which no other people have manifested 
in the like degree. They speak of their horses with all the 
warmth of eastern enthusiasm, they cherish the memory of 
their feats, and boast of their ancestry. They have formed 
to themselves families which they hold to be of noble lineage ; 
and, breeding from these, and preserving the purity of de- 
scent, they have succeeded, beyond all the people of the 
East, in perpetuating a race of horses possessed of properties 
which have suited them, in an eminent degree, to the condi- 
tion of the country, and the uses of the people. 

The horses of Arabia are connected, in all their charac- 
ters, with those of the Caucasus and Asia Minor, as might 
be inferred from the Seographical position of the country in 
contact with the great, region of the Asiatic Horse on the 


476 THE HORSE. 


north. But inhabiting a very dry and arid region, their cha- 
racters have become adapted to these conditions of climate 
and food. They are more compact than the horses of Bar- 
bary, having a rounder body, shorter limbs, with more of 
sinew, or what is termed bone. Yet they are of the smaller 
class of horses, very little exceeding, on a medium, fourteen 
hands, or fifty-six inches in height. As compared with the 
horses of countries abounding in the grasses, their aspect is 
lean, their form slender, and their chest narrow. But the 
slimness of figure of these horses is not inconsistent with 
muscular force ; and their movements are agile, their natural 
paces swift, and their spirit is unmatched. The power of 
their delicate limbs is indicated by the well-marked muscles 
of the fore-arm, and the starting sinews of the leg. The 
shoulder is sufficiently oblique; the withers are elevated; 
the: back is moderately short; and the quarters are good. 
The head is well formed ; the forehead is broad ; the ears are 
somewhat long, but alert; the eyes full and clear; the veins 
prominent ;—the whole rather indicating a happy union of 
gentleness and spirit, than that fiery temper which is asso- 
ciated with the common ideas of the Desert Horse, Bishop 
Heber, in the narrative of his journey through the Upper 
Provinces of India, gives, in a passing notice, a more correct 
notion of the Arab than the more laboured descriptions of 
_ others :—* My morning rides,” says he, “ are very pleasant. 
My horse is a nice, quiet, good-tempered little Arab, who is 
so fearless, that he goes without starting close to an ele- 
phant, and is so gentle and docile that he eats bread out of 
my hand, and has almost as much attachment and coaxing 
ways as a dog. This seems to be the general character of 
the Arab horses, to judge from what I have seen in this 
country. It is not the fiery dashing animal I had supposed, 
but with more rationality about him, and more apparent con- 
fidence in his rider, than the majority of English horses.” 
The Figure at the head of this section represents correctly 
the form of the genuine Arab. The horse here represented 


HISTORY. ATT 


was taken in an attack by an Arab tribe on a party of the 
Royal Family of Persia, when journeying on a pilgrimage. 
The Arab chief who headed the attacking party was killed, 
and his charger, running into the Persian ranks, was taken. 
A ransom, enormous for so poor a tribe, was subsequently . 
_ offered by the Arabs for their noble horse, but refused; and 
he was brought to England by Sir John M‘Neil, the British 
Resident at the Court of Persia. He stands fourteen and 
a half hands high. He is gentle in the highest degree, and 
so thoroughly trained to that kind of exercise which the 
Arabs are careful to teach their horses, that he may be gal- 
loped round the narrowest circle. When his portrait was 
in the course of being painted, he was languid from the cold 
of the weather. It was wished to rouse him for a little, and 
the idea occurred of trying the effect of some tones of simple 
music. The sounds no sooner struck his ear than his whole 
frame was agitated ; his heart throbbed so violently, that its 
beating could be seen; and so great was his excitement, 
that it was necessary instantly to stop the music. Some 
chord of feeling, it seems, had been struck; perchance he 
was reminded, for a moment, of his desert home, and of the 
friends from whom he had been so rudely severed. — 

The horses of England would perish under the scanty 
nourishment, the toils, and privations of the Arab. These 
Desert horses subsist on the scantiest fare, and are patient 
of hunger and thirst in a degree unknown in any other races 
except the African. They feed on the scanty plants which 
the borders of the desert supply, and when these are wanting, 
they are fed on a little barley, with chopped straw, withered 
herbs, roots dragged from the sands, dates, when these can 
be obtained, and in cages of need, the milk of the Camel. 
They drink at long intervals, and in moderate quantities. 
They bear continued exposure to the fiercest heat, and day 
after day pursue marches of incredible toil through the burn- 
ing sands of the wildernegs. The temper of these beautiful 
horses is no less happily moulded than their bodily powers 


478 THE HORSE. 


to their condition. They are gentle, patient, and attached 
to their rude and simple protectors. This, indeed, is to be 
regarded as the effect of training as much as of tempera- 
ment ; for these horses, under the charge of Europeans, fre- 
quently manifest a vicious and indomitable temper. But the 
Arab treats his horse as a companion, never beats him, but 
cheers him with his voice, and only uses him with seeming 
cruelty in those demands on the physical powers of the ani- 
mal which necessity requires. In the desert, the mare of the 
Bedouin and her foal inhabit the same tent as himself and 
his children. She is the friend and playmate of the little 
household ; her neck is often their pillow, and the children 
roll upon and caress her and her foal, and no accident ever 
happens. The mare of the Arab thus acquires a docility and 
attachment to man which nothing afterwards destroys. She 
is obedient to her master’s voice, and will neigh when she 
hears his footsteps. Without a bit she will obey the slight- 
est motion of the rider, stand at a word, or put herself at 
speed in an instant, Such is the creature so happily formed 
for the scanty herbs, the thirst and toils of the desert, These 
fine little horses have extended over all the East, and their 
descendants retain for a long time the characters which had 
been imprinted npon them in their native wilderness. 

The horses of Arabia are produced in the greatest num- 
bers in the countries bordering on Syria and the Euphrates, 
and there likewise the finest races are reared ; nay, a great 
part of the horses called Arabian are in reality produced 
beyond the true geographical bounds of Arabia. The 
larger part of Arabia, consisting of sands and rocky deserts, 
has never in any age been fitted for the rearing of many 
horses; and it is altogether an error to suppose that these 
steril regions are countries abounding in horses. Not only 
are the countries too barren for the rearing of horses, but 
the burning climate of the greater part of the country ap- 
pears to be eminently unfriendly to the health and growth of 
the animal. Those that are reared to the south of the 


10 


HISTORY. 479 


countries stretching from Mecca to the Persian Gulf are 
stunted in their forms, and so few in number, that there is 
scarcely any inhabited country that contains so small a num- 
ber of horses as the regions which some have supposed to be 
the cradle of the race. 
When the united chiefs of the Wahabees attacked Mehe- 
met Ali at Bysset in the year 1815, there were only 500 
horses in their whole army of 25,000 men; and when horses 
are found in the most fertile parts of South Arabia, they are 
reckoned a rarity, and are only in the possession of princes 
and people of. rank. “In affirming,” says the distinguished 
traveller Burckhardt, in a letter to Mr Sewell, “that the 
aggregate number of horses in Arabia, as bordered by the 
Euphrates and Syria, amounts to about 50,000, I am confi- 
dent I have not underrated them. The richest country in 
this part of the East appears to be Mesopotamia. The tribes 
of Kurds and Bedouins in that quarter very likely possess 
more horses than all the Arabian Bedouins put together ; for 
the richness of their pastures easily propagates their studs. 
The best pasturing places of Arabia not only produce the 
Sreatest quantity of horses, but likewise the best and most 
choice breeds. The finest Koheyls of the Khomb are met 
with in the Medgid on the Euphrates, and in the Syrian 
deserts ; while in the southern parts of Arabia, and especially 
Zemba, no good breeds of horses exist but those imported 
from the north. In the tract between Mecca and Medina, 
between the mountains and the sea, a distance of, at least, 
260 miles, I do not believe that 200 horses can be found ; and 
the same proportion of numbers is to be remarked all alon g 
the Red Sea from Zemba up to Akaba.” It is certain, then, 
that Arabia is a, country remarkably poor in horses, and that, 
just as might be inferred from analogy, the best of the race 
are to be found in the countries where the climate is most 
temperate, and where a, sufficient degree of food is produced. 
It is, however, in the remoter districts inland that the purest 
of the race exist, because the greatest attention is there paid 


sa 


eg aoa 


480 THE HORSE. 


to the rearing of them. It is usual to name the horses of 
the Bedouins of the interior desert the Nedjed Breed, from 
the desert of that name, extending from Medina eastwards ; 
but very few horses are produced in the Nedjed itself. There 
used to be considerable difficulty in procuring the horses of 
the inland tribes of even the Syrian deserts, from the sup- 
posed hazard of confiding in the faith of the people, but, in 
reality, from the distrust-which these wandering tribes enter- 
tained of the inhabitants of the towns. The intercourse, 
however, has become more considerable within the last thirty 
years, in consequence of which circumstance, the pashas and 
other rich individuals in Syria have been enabled to supply 
their stables with Nedjeds; and from the same cause, French, 
Russian, and Prussian agents, have been able to procure 
many fine stallions of the races of the remoter Bedouins, for 
their respective governments. In the year 1817, according 
to Mr Barker, whose long residence at Aleppo gave him full 
opportunity of observing the growing intercourse of the Be- 
douins with the settled inhabitants, three very numerous 
tribes, who had never before beheld a Turkish minaret, 
pitched their tents within a few miles of Aleppo, bringing 
along with them, at least, 6000 horses. From these it was 
easy for Europeans residing in Syria to select a number of 
splendid stallions, but none of them, it is said, found their 
way to England.* But though the breeds of the interior may 
have been obtained with difficulty, a great number of horses 
are continually being exported from the northern parts of 
Arabia. The Turks of Asia Minor and Syria gbtain consi- 
derable numbers; but the principal trade is to the East 
Indies, from Bussora on the Persian Gulf. The exportation 
is chiefly of stallions, the Arabs retaining the mares for 
breeding, and preferring them for the purpose of the saddle. 
The Arabs, we are assured, pay great attention to the purity 
of the descent of their horses, and have certain races of them 


* St John’s: Egypt. 


—— 


a nciigliren, ais ete 


HISTORY, 481 


which are deemed of noble blood. — Contrary to the practice 
of Europe, they reckon their descent by the dam ; but they 
never attempt to prove the genealogy of their horses, except 
by tradition, and the beauty of their form. The pretended 
hujjis, or written attestations of descent produced by dealers 
in Arabian horses, are, we are assured, a trick, either on the 
part of the Moslem jockeys or the Christian. 

~ In contact with Arabia upon the east is Persia, a country 
of horsemen and soldiers from early times, in which we find 
the same form of the Horse distinctly exhibited. Persia is 
a country of much diversity of surface. It is very elevated, 
and possesses an atmosphere of great purity and dryness. 
Towards the south it presents much of the arid character of 
Arabia ; towards the north it is productive of the grasses and 
other herbaceous plants, and retains its verdure for a great 
part of the year. In the northern provinces, accordingly, the 
horses are of greater size and more developed forms. Some 
of them near the Caspian Sea are as large as the horses of 
Normandy. Towards the south they resemble more the 
horses of Arabia, with which, besides, they are much mingled 
in blood: but they have not the same delicacy of figure, and 
are not so much valued in their own and other countries. 
They are fed sparingly, like all the horses of the same warm 
regions. The custom is to feed and water them at sunrise 
and sunset; and the ordinary provender is barley and chopped 
straw. They are kept clothed, and at night are piquetted in 
open yards, their hinder legs being confined by cords of 
twisted hair, fastened to rings with pegs driven into the 
ground. The same practice is described by Xenophon as in 


use amongst the Persians more than 2000 years before. All _ 


persons of the least distinction in Persia ride on horseback, 

and scarcely any one wil] deign to go the shortest distance 

on foot. Sir John Malcolm gives an amusing anecdote illus- 

trative of the national feeling. A naval officer belonging to 

one of the British frigates, in paying a visit to the Envoy, 

thought it fitting to Procure a horse; but unfortunately, like 
24H 


noiiding atic. 


482 "(THE HORSE.. 


other gentlemen of his profession, he did not feel himself 
quite at home, as we say, in the saddle, that is, he rode very 
ill. The native who supplied the ship with vegetables, jealous 
of the honour of his European friends, excused the matter to 
his countrymen by giving it out privately that the English 
gentleman was drunk, conceiving it to be less dishonourable 
to his new friends to be drunk at noon than to be unable to 
ride. To the north and east of Persia are countries where 
the same form of the Horse presents itself, but large and 
powerful, and suited for the exertion of physical strength. 
These countries, usually termed Independent Tartary, abound 
in the grasses, and give birth to horses, not very handsome, but 
possessed of good action, and great powers of endurance. The 
horses of some of the Turcoman tribes are sixteen hands high. 

Eastward of the modern limits of Persia is the wild, beau- 
tiful, but now long-desolated country of the Afghans, inha- 
bited by races of men of mixed lineage, of old under the 
stern dominion of the Persian kings, but now almost savage 
from the absence of law, and perpetual feuds. The Horses of 
this country are partly similar to those of Persia, and partly 
a race of stout agile ponies, suited to the mountainous coun- 
try and barbarous condition of its inhabitants. Many of them 
are beautifully spotted, and sought after in the countries of the 
_ East for their rarity and beauty. In contact with Caubul on 
the south, and of the same physical characters, is the ancient 
Gedrosia, now Beloochistan, inhabited in like manner by law- 
less herdsmen and robbers, in possession of numerous horses. 

Eastward we enter the noble region of the Seven Rivers 
or Punjaub, the lower valley of Sinde, and the wide coun- 
tries of India, so called. Over a country so vast and diver- 
sified, numerous breeds of Horses necessarily exist, whose 
characters have been formed by the nature of the localities 
in which they have been naturalized, and by the introduction 
of foreign races, either by the various conquerors of the 
country, or by the means of commerce and otherwise. In 


general, it may be said that India is not a country very fa- 


Se pA OR Cn Ee ee a SOS, SS ea ORE, 
SS eon a ake enemy Ne a” ote ee 


HISTORY. 483 


vourable to the production of the Horse. The tallest and 
strongest are found in the northern provinces, in the coun- 
tries near the Indus ; but towards the warmer countries of. 
the south and east, they fall off in strength and development 
of parts. The Indian horses are generally of the smaller 
class, seldom rising above fourteen and a half hands in height, 
and mostly falling below that standard. They are showy 
enough, but are deficient in bone, slim below the knee, and 
often of bad temper. But there are prodigious numbers of 
fine horses in India, chiefly of foreign lineage, either pure, or 
mixed with the native racey. There is a constant trade in 
these animals going on from Persia, Caubul, and even Bok- 
hara; and a continued importation from Arabia to Bombay 
and other parts of the coast. This is due to European indi- 
viduals and the wealthier natives ; and the East India Com- 
pany has long employed active means to improve the indige- 
nous races by the establishment of studs, with the especial 
design of being enabled to procure horses for their numerous 
cavalry. In this manner are superior horses introduced, and 
the races of the country preserved from deterioration. 

In India are various races of diminutive horses or Ponies, 
Some of which have apparently acquired the characters proper 
to them in the high lands and deserts of the interior of the 
Country itself, amongst which are the small coarse race 
termed Tattoos, valued by the natives -for their hardiness, 
and power to Subsist on common fare. Others are derived 
from the mountainous tract which lies between the plains of 
India and the crest of the great Himalaya range, forming 
the country of N epaul and others, westward to beyond the 
Sutludj. This ig @ region somewhat like Switzerland, but 
more bold and "ugged. It produces a great number of moun- 
tain ponies, Stout, and capable of sustaining drudgery and 
hard usage. To the ponies of these mountains the natives 
of India apply the term Tang-huns, which is likewise appli- 
cable to the party-coloured race of Thibet. . 

The Himalaya mountains, so named from the Sanscrit, 


‘ 


484 THE HORSE. 


denoting a Region of Snow, ascend from Hindti-koh in Caubul 
to their greatest elevation, about 85° of longitude, and then 
decline by the mountainous country of Bhootan to the valley 
of the Brahmapootra. Beyond the highest crest of these 
noble mountains lies the country of Thibet, stretching from 
east to west nearly 2000 miles, and mostly bounded on the 
south by a parallel chain of lower altitude. In this the 
highest mhabited land of Asia, whence proceed its most 
celebrated rivers, the Indus, the Ganges, the Brahmapootra, 
are found Horses raised in such numbers as the rugged na- 
ture of the country will permit the inhabitants to rear them. 
They are small but sinewy, and agile in a wonderful degree. 
They are employed by the natives for the saddle, and, along: 
with the Mule, the Sheep, and the Yak, to carry merchandize 
through the terrible passes of the wild mountains that bound 
the country on different sides. They are often party-coloured, 
or, aS we Say, piebald. Accustomed to make bounds to over- 
come the obstacles they encounter, they retain the habit when 
harnessed, and demand some care in training. They are said 
to fall off in spirit when brought to the plains of India; but 
yet they are greatly valued there, and a considerable exporta- 
tion of them takes place to the northern provinces. They 
extend westward into Caubul, but chiefly eastward by Bhootan 
into China, where their characteristic colour appears among 
the races of the lower country. They have extended along 
the river Kiang, which, taking its rise in Thibet, flows east- 
ward in a course of 3500 miles, until it falls into the sea at 
the noble city of Nankin. 

Of the Horses of the Chinese, we can say little from any 
certain knowledge obtained by us. The Chinese scarcely 
make use of Horses except to fatten and eat them, although, 
in the provinces bordering on Tartary and Thibet, they are 
numerous. In one of the latter, Gutzlaff informs us, Horses 
are so abundant, that even the women will scarcely stir from 
their houses but on horseback. But although the Chinese are 


themselves no horsemen, they maintain a numerous army of 


— se a a EE a aba i A A oa a i a ih I a ae PR, os 
ana . “ pa eae Lis mae a Ale AD a omer pe: 


HISTORY. 485 


Tartar cavalry, capable of maintaining the influence of the 
Empire amongst the neighbouring countries, but unable, as 
events have shewn, to withstand for an hour in the field the 
Skill, discipline, and valour of European soldiers. 

‘« The great countries of Indo- China, south-east of the Brah- 
mapootra, comprehending the dominions termed Siam, Cam- 
bodia, Malacca, and others, are, generally Speaking, a re- 
gion of thick forests, unfavourable to the rearing and mul- 
tiplication of Horses. The inhabitants of these countries, 
therefore, can never have been horsemen like the nations of 
Western Asia, or the nomadic tribes of the interior. The 
horses, accordingly, of this part of India, are few in number, 
and little cared for by the inhabitants. Those, however, 
which are known to us, as at the sea-ports, are of good form, 
of the pony size, fiery, and tolerably fleet, though not pos- 
sessed of great power of endurance. | 

In the rich and beautiful islands which stretch from the 
sea of J apan to Java, the Horses resemble those of the 
neighbouring continent; and most of the islands to the west- 
ward, of 125° of longitude, appear to possess them. So far 
as they have been observed, they are all of them small, and 
even diminutive in size, but possessed of stout shoulders, 
having good action, and manifesting no want of spirit, though 
apparently incapable of much endurance. Horses do not 
Seem to extend to the eastward beyond the island of Timor, 
So that they are not found in the great and fertile island of 
New Guinea, They did not exist in New Holland, although 
now the finest races of the East have been carried to it, and 
appear to find a habitat as suitable as any in the world. No 
Horses existed in any of the Polynesian Islands at their dig- 
covery, and none in America, although now multiplied in 
every part of it where European arts have extended, 

To return to Thibet, the highest land of the Old Continent 
in which the Domestic Horse is reared. To the north lies 
the sandy desert of Kobi, in contact with other tracts of 
boundless deserts, Stretching nearly from east to west. Be- 


486 THE HORSE. 


| yond this dreary wilderness are the vast countries of the 
Eastern Tartars, extending on the west to the little Altaic 
mountains, the ancient Imaus; to the mountains of Siberia 
on the north; and to the Sea of Okotsk on the east. This 
great region is now included within the nominal and actual 
dominions of China, and was long known as Chinese Tartary. 
It is known to modern geographers as Mongolia, and the in- 
habitants as Mongoles, names which probably have had no * 
other origin than the misapprehension of writers. It is the 
great seat of the Kalmuk and allied people. It abounds with 
Horses, which form the wealth of the nomadic tribes, who 
have been horsemen and wanderers in every known period. 
The horses of these countries are stout and enduring, but 
very small, being, in truth, merely what we term ponies. 
They have been the instruments, however, of extensive re- 
volutions. It is generally believed that the Huns came from 
this country. But, however this be, we learn that the pre- 
datory horsemen of Eastern Asia were in the earliest periods 
of history the ruthless enemies of the settled inhabitants 
within their reach. The annals of the Chinese relate chiefly 
to the unceasing contests with these barbarians, and inform 
us, that at length a wall, more than 1200 miles in length, 
was raised up against their encroachments. This wall, the 
most remarkable monument of human labour in the world, 
still exists, to inform us how frail a barrier it proved against 
the warlike horsemen it was designed to curb. Twice after- 
wards they rendered themselves masters of the empire, and 
now remain its sovereigns. In the beginning of the thir- 
teenth century appeared Genghis, the Pagan, the most ruth- 
less conqueror that had appeared;in the world. Uniting the 
various tribes, both of the Eastern and Western Tartars, 
he subdued, in an incredibly short time, the greater part. of 
Asia, bringing havoc and desolation wherever he carried his 
hordes. 

To the eastward of Thibet is what is termed Independent 
Tartary, inhabited by the Turcomans, the Kirguisans, and 


- a * a a vee RS eth oi St SOPOT im ini Giles 3.6 eo Soe aot. Res 


HISTORY. 487 


others. But these races are not confined to this part of Tar- 
tary, but extend more or less continuously southward into 
Caubul, Persia, Syria, and even beyond the confines of. 
Europe, northward into Siberia, and eastward, beyond the 
Altaic Mountains. These people, aided by their instrument 
of war, the Horse, have again and again been conquerors ; 
but, far superior as a race to the Kalmuks, they have been 
able to found enduring kingdoms and empires. It was this 
race which really supported the empire of Genghis, as it did 
about 170 years later that of his successor Leng the Mos- 
lem, generally known to us as Timur-Leng, or Tamarlane, 
who, adding religious fanaticism to his thirst for power, renew- 
ed the system of conquest and extermination of his precur- 
sor. He overran. Persia, sacked Bagdad, and, crossing the 
Indus, laid Delhi in ashes, carrying off an enormous booty 
of treasure and captives, and murdering the miserable inha- 
bitants by thousands. This wretch died in the year of our 
Lord 1405, and his empire soon after crumbled to pieces. 
The Western Tartars became divided, and the greater part 
-of the Kalmuk tribes resumed their pristine habits, and are 
now again herdsmen and horsemen, restrained from violence 
by the arms and policy of the Chinese. Of the same race 
were the people known to us as Turks, who subdued the 
fairest parts of Western Asia, northern Africa, and Greece, 
where they are still permitted to possess, through the mu- 
tual jealousy of European powers, the throne of the eastern 
_ Cesars.. And of the same class of rude horsemen, but mixed 
_ in lineage, were the first Mahommedan invaders of India, 
who, in the year 1208, founded the Moslem dominion in India, 
which, afterwards known as the Empire of the Méguls, or 
descendants of Timur, survived until our own times. The 
Horses of these people are much superior in strength and 
stature to those of the Kalmuks, manifesting the influence 
of a more genial climate on the development of the animal 
form. . 


- Northward of Independent and Chinese Tartary, are the 


488 THE HORSE. 


immense dominions of Russia in Asia. Here, likewise, are 
found nomadic tribes, but reduced to entire snbmission by 
the powerful state under whose dominions they have lived 
for ages. This region, now generally known as Siberia, con- 
tains, we have seen, the Wild Horse; but, from the scanti- 
ness of the population, domestic Horses are few as compared 
with those of Chinese and Independent Tartary. The Horses 
are small, sturdy, and enduring, but continually degenerating 
with the increasing rigour of the climate, until, as we ap- 
proach nearer the Arctic regions, they cease to be found 
either in the wild or subjugated state, giving place to the 
Rein-deer and the Dog. 

Turning to Europe, the Horses are seen to partake of the 
mixed lineage and character of the inhabitants. Northward 
and westward of the chain of the Caucasus extend the gigantic 
dominions of Russia in Europe, comprehending the countries 
inhabited of old by the Sarmatians, and other warlike nations 
of herdsmen and soldiers, known generally as Slavonians. 
The horses of these countries are hardy, muscular in their 
limbs, and capable of enduring great labour and privations ; 
but the finest of these are found in the countries near the 
Black Sea, where a charming climate calls forth a rich vege- 
tation. The Ukraine in particular, lying between the Don 
and the Dnieper, is noted for producing a fine race of 
Horses, distinguished by their long manes and flowing tails. 
These countries have in various ages poured their swarms 
of emigrants and conquerors westward or southward, car- 
rying with them their Horses, the great engine of their con- 
quests ; and, at this day, Russia possesses the most for- 
midable and well-equipped army of cavalry in the world. 
The Horses of the Slavonic nations still prevail in Poland, 
Moldavia, Hungary, and other countries of the Danube; and 
they have penetrated into Prussia and the countries of the 
Baltic. . 

The first of the European countries in which we have his- 
torical records of the domestication of the Horse is Greece ; 


Agi. 


HISTORY. | 489 


. 


but it does not follow that Greece was the first of the coun- 
tries of Europe in which the Horse was subdued. On the 
contrary, the legends of the Greeks themselves inform us, 
that they had to maintain fierce contests with more early 
horsemen under the fabled names of Centaurs, probably 


from Thrace and the countries beyond the Danube. They 


had contests, too, with the Amazons, so called, whom they 
fabled to be women, but who were probably Kurds or other 
Asiatics, clothed in the flowing robes distinctive of their 
country. The Greeks never, in any age, became distinguish- 
ed as horsemen. They did not, until a late period, learn 
the use of the stirrup and the horse-shoe, which, from the 
remains found in tumuli, there is reason to believe, were 
familiar from time immemorial to the Tartar horsemen. But 
the Greeks established, at an early age, the noble games 
termed Olympic, which, by common consent, were held at 
Elis, which became the theatre to which the warlike youth 
of Greece resorted to claim the olive crown for victory in 
the chariot race and athletic combats. Games at other 
places were established, and continued after Greece had 
ceased to be a country of warriors and freemen. The races 
of the chariot were the first in order of time and pre-emi- 
nence; but about the fifteenth Olympiad, the simple horse- 
race was added, and sculptured monuments remain to show 
the Grecian Horse as he was caparisoned for either use. The 
Hippodrome, in which the horse and chariot races took place, 
was of narrow extent, and from the frequent turnings, all the - 
address and courage of the charioteers and horsemen was 
called for. The horsemen, using no saddles or stirrups, the 
difficulty of the exercise was increased, and the horses were 
unshod. The Greeks derived their finest horses from Asia 
Minor, but the races of the country were then, as now, of 
mixed blood, partly derived from the countries south of the 
Caucasus, and partly from Thrace and the countries of the 
Danube. The sculptured representations of the Grecian 
horse which have reached. us exhibit much of what may be 


490 | THE HORSE. 


called the Caucasian character, mixed, however, with the 
hardier aspect of the horses of the North. The modern in- 
habitants of the same countries have likewise races of horses 
of mixed lineage. The finest of the Turkish horses are de- 
rived from the Asiatic provinces ; the most esteemed for the 
saddle are obtained from the Syrian deserts and Arabia; and 
the most robust and most active and useful from Servia, 
Bosnia, and the other provinces of the north. 

In Italy, the Horse had been subjugated from periods of 
great antiquity; but the Romans were long contemptible 
horsemen, and to the last never equalled the Asiatic riders. 
Even Julius Cesar, we are informed by modern military offi- 
cers, made such dispositions of his cavalry, as could only have 
arisen from ignorance of the proper functions of this arm in 
war. Of the character of the early horses of the Italians we 
know nothing ; but the representations of the Horse, in a later 
age, lead us to the conclusion, that the Romans cultivated a 
stout and muscular horse, rather than one of much lightness 
and elegance of figure. But during the luxury of the empire, 
horses were necessarily derived from many sources, and 
races of mixed lineage established. Of the native breeds, the 
Tuscan and Etrurian were the most esteemed ; of foreign 
races, the Spanish and Sicilian were valued ; and, in a later 
age, those of Barbary were introduced, to give greater light- 
ness to the horses employed in the Circensian games.. The 
games of the Circus were established at an early period, and 
included both horse and chariot races. The Circus Maxi- 
mus, first built by Tarquinius Priscus, was an oblong of 
three and a half furlongs in length, with rows of seats, one 
above another, all round, capable, according to Pliny, of con- 
taining 250,000 persons, and, according to modern measure- 
ments, 380,000. Along the centre of the Space ran a thick 
low wall, at the ends of which were pyramidal columns, 
rising from one base, termed Metz, round which the horses 
and chariots turned. The race usually consisted of seven 
rounds, equal to between seven and eight miles, The horse- 


HISTORY. 491 


men were generally slaves, or trained performers. A num- 
ber of horses started together, and the riders were. divided 
into parties, distinguished by the colours they bore. The 
Spectators interested themselves in the success of these par- 
_ ties, rather than in that of the individual horses, as on the 
modern Turf; and the contests were altogether of a ruder 
character than we now associate with the ideas of this kind 


of exercise. 


The Horses of modern Italy present a great diversity of 
character. On the irruptions of the barbarians, those of 
the northern wilderness were introduced in great numbers, 
and have left their traces, even to the colour of the skin, 
to the present day. During the times of chivalry, and the 
heavy-armed cavalry of the middle ages, it may be believ- 
ed that the more powerful kinds of horses would be sought 
for; and there are many of these still in Italy. The horses 
of Naples are yet in high estimation for their strength and 
noble action. Many of them were formerly introduced into 
England, and contributed to form the mixed races of that 
country. But the horses of Naples, as of other parts of 
Italy, have lost their value, as compared with foreign races, 
and few are now carried out of the country. 

Spain is a country in which the Horse has been more 
mixed with African blood than in other parts of Europe. In 
the early part of the eighth century, the Moors and Arabs of 
Northern Africa invaded the country, and maintained a long 
dominion over it. During ages of heroic struggles, they 
were by degrees subdued ; and, after the lapse of nearly 800 
years, the remains of them, when deprived of weapons, and 
engaged in the pursuits of peaceful industry, were expelled 
by edicts of unheard of bigotry and cruelty. During this 
long period, the horses of Africa were introduced in great, 
numbers, and affected, in an important manner, the charac- 
ters of the native races. This mixture of blood was the 
greatest in Andalusia, Granada, and other kingdoms of the 
south; and here it is that the Spanish Jennet was formed, 


ier 


wee gs 


492 THE HORSE. 


and is still found with its pristine characters. These elegant 
little horses were greatly valued over Europe. They are 
stouter than the Barbs, but have much of the same graceful 
and easy action. They are gentle, spirited, and capable of 
long and rapid journeys. They were used as Palfreys in the 
middle ages, and numbers of them being brought to England, 
they were mingled with the native races. 

France has long produced a vast number of horses for 
war, for the chase, for the saddle, and for carriages of every 
kind. The native horses of France vary in strength and 
size with the fertility of the districts in which they have 
been naturalized. In the countries of abundant herbage 
they tend to the massy form characteristic: of the great 
horses of Northern Europe. In the southern districts, and 
generally in those in which the production of herbage is 
scanty, they assume a lighter form. But besides the charac- 
ters acquired from the nature of the districts in which the 
horses are naturalized, there are other characters imprinted 
by mixture of foreign blood. French writers divide the horses 
of France into those of the Common and those of the Fine 
race; the latter having had their characters communicated to 
them by means of foreign blood. The largest and most power- 
ful horses of France are produced in N ormandy and Picardy. 
The best for the saddle used to be derived from Limousin, but 
the horses of Limousin are now greatly degenerated. In the 
year 732, a mighty army of Saracens penetrated even to 
the walls of Poictiers, where they were totally routed by 
the heroic Charles Martel. It is perhaps to the horses 
then left in the country, that those of Limousin and the 
neighbouring districts owe that lightness of form which dis- 
tinguishes them. Towards the mouth of the Rhone is like- 
wise a race of agile horses, having the characters of Barbs, 
from which they are probably descended. But the native 
horses of France may be generally described as destitute of 
that elegance and lightness of action which characterize the 
horses of southern lineage. Astonishing pains, however, 


HISTORY. 493 


have been taken by successive Governments of France to 
improve the breeds of native horses. This was a favourite 
object of Napoleon, who introduced considerable numbers of. 
Arabians by the way of Germany. But the enormous de- 
struction of horses by war in the Revolutionary and Imperial 
armies, and the necessity of resorting to every race of the 
tributary countries around for cavalry, have greatly retarded 
the improvement of the races of France. Since the peace, 
the high-bred horses of England have been much sought for, 
as possessing the qualities in which the French horses are 
supposed to be deficient, namely, bone and action. 
Germany is a country which, in every known age, has 
produced numerous herds of horses. The native horses of 
Germany vary with the fertility of the countries which pro- 
duce them; but generally, Germany is a country productive 
of the grasses and corn, and the horses.are large and fitted 
for the exercise of physical strength, but deficient in agility 
and fleetness. They are well suited for heavy cavalry, for 
which the Germans have always been noted in modern wars ; 
and, during the middle ages, the larger horses were especially 
cultivated for the knights and heavy-armed horsemen of the 
time. Lighter horses have also been introduced from the 
Ukraine, and other countries to the eastward. The largest 
horses in Germany are found in Holstein, Mecklenburg, and 
other countries rich in the grasses, on the shores of the Bal-_ 
tic, and the valleys of the great rivers. The same race of 
heavy horses extends to the Danish dominions of the Conti-— 
nent, which have long supplied the other parts of Europe 
with coach-horses. In Holland and Flanders the same 
kinds of horses exist, but of yet more bulky and clumsy 
form: shewing that when the climate is moist, when the 
grasses are abundant, and when artificial food is largely sup- 
plied, the Horse assumes that grossness of form which in- 
creases his powers of mere strength, but diminishes his speed, 
and capability of active exertion —The Horse of the. nor- 
—thern marshes of Germany was probably that which gave 


494 THE HORSE. 


distinction to the Belgian cohorts in the armies of the Ro- 
mans: and, at a subsequent age, the great Black Horse of 
the Vandals excited terror amongst the nations of Southern 
Europe. 

Scandinavia, though imperfectly fitted for the rearing of 
many horses, yet possesses them in greater numbers than, 
from the nature of the country, and the pursuits of the in- 
habitants, might have been expected. But the warlike North- 
men, themselves derived, as their legends, mythology, and 
language attest, from those countries eastward where the 
Horse abounded, retain a considerable attachment to these 
animals. Their horses vary in strength and stature with 
the fertility, natural or acquired, of the districts where they 
have been naturalized, from the Alps of Norway to the 
provinces of the Baltic shores. But, with the exception of 
the larger kinds fitted for the labour of draught, the Scan- 
dinavian. horses may be described as being of small size, as 
having stout muscular limbs, with great power of enduring 
steady labour, but as being wanting in the spirit and fleet- 
ness which characterize the horses of warmer climes. 

In the British Islands the Horses present a greater diver- 
sity than perhaps in any other country of the same extent. 
This diversity arises in part from the different degrees of al- 
titude and productiveness of the various parts of the country, 
and in part from the great admixture that has taken place 
of the blood of foreign races. But, before describing the 
Horses proper .to or naturalized in these Islands, we shall 
consider the Horse as he is presented to us in another part 
of the world, where, in regions of boundless fertility and ex- 
tent, he has been subjected to the influence of new agents, 
and regained his natural liberty under circumstances the 
most favourable to the extension of his race. 

When the Spaniards, forgetful of the precepts of the im- 
mortal Genius who had guided them to the peaceful shores 
of the New World, began a war of extermination against. 
the unoffending natives, they everywhere carried with them 


= tiplied in Paraguay and other parts of the interior. These 


HISTORY. 495 


the Horse, and employed his powers to terrify and subdue 
their victims. Wherever these merciless invaders established 
their unjust dominion, the Horse was carried, and he multi- 
plied with a rapidity unknown in the richest parts of the 
ancient continents. And now, after the lapse of little more 
than three centuries, he is found naturalized from the frozen 
Straits of Magellan to the snows of Labrador, under every 
variety of climate and country. From the oppressors he has 
passed to the victims ; and the most Savage tribes of the in- 
- terior, from Patagonia to the Missouri and Columbia, have 
been enabled to appropriate this gift of Providence, and em- 
ploy it for their mutual destruction. 

The most remarkable circumstances attending the history 
of the Horse in Spanish America, is his escape from human 
control, and multiplication in the state of liberty. This first 
took place, according to Azara, about the year 1535, when 
the city of Buenos Ayres was suddenly abandoned by its in- 
habitants, who in their flight left behind them on the plains 
five horses and seven mares, which had been brought from 
_ Andalusia. These soon multiplied and gave origin to those © 
innumerable herds which people the boundless plains south- 
ward and westward of the Rio de la Plata; while others, 
_ escaping from the settlements north of the same river, mul- | 


- emancipated horses are at times in little herds, a stallion 
attaching himself to a certain number of mares; but these 
smaller herds likewise congregate into herds so vast in num- 
bers as to strike the beholder with amazement. Many thou- 
sands may often be seen together, acting upon a principle of 
apparent subordination and union. 
Certain of the troop assume the guidance of the rest, place 
themselves in the van when the herd migrates to new ground, 
and, when danger is threatened, give the signal to advance 
or fly. They gallop boldly up to the traveller and objects 
that are new to them, unlike to the wilder race of Tartary, 


who station sentinels around the troop, and fly from the sight 
i : 


496 THE HORSE. 


of danger and the footsteps of man. When they see the do- 
mesticated horses, they gallop up to them, caress them with 
affectionate neighings, and use every mean to induce‘them 
to escape with them to the wilderness. The latter are not 
slow to accept the invitation, and, when once restored to 
liberty, never willingly submit to bondage again. When the 
wild troops draw near, all the vigilance of the travellers is 
required to prevent the desertion of their horses, who struggle 
to disencumber themselves of their trappings and get free. 
The Wild Horses advance in columns, never in a line, some- 


times retreating and returning several times, before they can 


be driven away, and sometimes charging the equipage, and 
throwing every thing into confusion, in order to effect the 
rescue. This generous sympathy for their subjugated fellows 
does not exist in the wild races of Tartary, and, in the case 
of the Spanish horses, may be safely pronounced to be the 
result of instinctive feelings connected with their former state 
of domestication. An amusing traveller, speaking of some 
captured horses driven cruelly along at speed, goaded and 
wearied, through the more settled parts of the country, thus 
describes the effect upon their fellows. “As they are thus 
galloping along, urged by the spur, it is’ interesting to see 
the group of wild horses one passes. The mares, which are 
never ridden in South America, seem not to understand what 
makes the poor horse hang his head so low and look so weary. 
The little innocent colts come running to meet him, and then 
start away frightened ; while the old horses, whose white 
marks on the flanks and backs betray their acquaintance 
with the spur and saddle, walk slowly away for some dis- 
tance, then breaking into a trot as they seek for safety, snort 
and look behind them, first with one eye and then with the 
other, turning their nose from right to left, and carrying 
their long tail high in the air,” * 

These Wild Horses are easily restored to domestication. 


* Head’s Journey across the Pampas. 
3 


. HISTORY. 497 


Hither some of the docility of temper remains which the race 
had acquired in the domestic state, or the genial clime and 
abundant herbage render them of gentler temperament than 
the pristine horses of the Asiatic deserts. The means, how- 
ever, taken to subdue them are of unequalled barbarity, and 
altogether different from the careful culture with which, in 
other countries, the youthful colt is reconciled to obedience, 
and gradually trained to’ administer to the wants and plea- 
sures of his protector. ; 

When it is intended to capture a ‘Wild Horse or Baguale, 
as it is called, the Guachos, or inhabitants of the plain, set 
out in search of the herd on horses trained to the chase: 
Hither by means of the bolas and lazo, or of the lazo alone, 
the animal is entangled, thrown to the ground, and either at 
once mounted and furiously ridden, or tied to a post for se- 
veral days without food or water, castrated and mounted. 
The bola referred to consists of three stones rolled in leather, 
and tied to a common centre, with strong leather cords more 
than a yard in length. One being taken hold of, the others 
are Swung around the head, and, when the necessary impe- 
tus is acquired, thrown with matchless dexterity round the 
limbs of the animal to be entangled. The lazo has been 
often described. It consists of a rope, about the thickness 
of the finger, made of twisted thongs of untanned hide, fifteen 
or twenty yards in length. It has a ring at one end forming 
a running noose.’ The other end is attached to a strong belt 
of hide, bound tightly round the horse. The coil is held by 
the left hand of the horseman; the noose end trails on the 
ground, except when in use, and then it is Swung round the 
head, when it expands in a circular form, and is discharged 
from the hand with unerring aim, falling upon the part at 
which it is aimed, the neck, or one or more of the legs, or 
round the body, as may be wished, the horseman himself at 
speed all the while. The entangled animal is hurled to the 
ground with tremendous violence, and, before he can recover 
himself, is seized, and sometimes a saddle is strapped upon 

21 


498 THE HORSE. 


his back, and a bit forced into his mouth, before he is suffered 
to rise from the ground. Such is the effect of the formidable 
missile, which, in all these countries, is used to capture the 
horse and other animals, and which incessant practice from 
childhood teaches the Guacho to use with matchless dex- 
terity. The very children, we are told, begin the practice of . 
the lazo almost as soon as they can run about, entangling 
all animals that are so unfortunate as to come within their 
reach—dogs, pigs, poultry, and the everywhere-persecuted 
cat; so that, by the time they are able to sit on horseback, 
they are dexterous in its use. Not only the wild but tame 
horses are seized ‘by this formidable engine, and the latter, 
who have experienced its effects, regard it with terror. The 
Guacho, it has been said, secures by it the wild horse which 
he wishes to subdue. Nay, sometimes when pursuing a jour- 
ney, he supplies himself in this manner with fresh horses, 
and pursues his course on an animal which had never before 
bent its neck to servitude. Approaching the wild animal, 
the lazo is cast upon him with unerring aim, and in &@ mo- 
ment hurls him to the ground. Before the animal can re- 
cover the shock, the Guacho springs upon him, and snatching 
the cloak from his own shoulders, wraps it round the head 
of the prostrate animal. He then forces into his mouth one 
of the bridles of the country, straps a saddle on his back, and 
bestriding him removes the cloak, when the animal springs 
upon his legs, and, by a thousand efforts, endeavours to free 
himself from hig new master. His efforts are vain: the 
Guacho keeps himself firm in his seat, and, by the force of 
his arm and dreadful spurs, reduces the animal to entire 
obedience. The subjection is complete: the Guacho pur- 
sues his journey om the captive horse, who, finding resistance 
vain, yields himself to necessity, and becomes the slave of 
man. These horses, though not very fleet, have amazing 
powers of endurance. In this their state of sudden bondage, 
they are sometimes ridden sixty, seventy, nay, itis said, a 
hundred miles, urged on at speed by the spur of their bar- 


HISTORY. 499 


barous rider. When the dreadful task is done, mangled, 
terrified, and fainting from fatigue, they are turned loose on 
| the plains. to perish, or rejoin, as best they may, their lost 
companions. . 
These Horses have reassumed, to a certain degree, the cha- 
_ racter of the wild type, as it is exemplified in the Horses of 
Tartary. The head has become larger, the ears more long, 
the limbs more muscular, and the general form less sym- 
metrical, than in the race from which they are descended. 
Their hair, however, has not become long and shaggy as in 
the Tartar horses, because they inhabit a soft and genial 
clime ; but it has tended to that uniformity of colour which 
distinguishes the wild from the domestic races of all animals, 
Their colour is always of a chestnut-brown, and never dun, 
as in the Tartar races; and whenever a bay, a black, or 
other colour appears, it is inferred that the individual is of 
the domesticated race, and has made its escape and joined 
the wild herds. They are enduring, it has been said, but 
not very fleet, and are easily run down by the subjugated 
breeds. . 

The domesticated horses of these countries possessed by 
the Spanish Americans, possess the general characters of 
the race from which they are descended ; but being treated 
with the utmost severity, and bred without attention to the 
choice of the parents, they have lost much of the grace of 
form and elegance of action which distinguish the true An- 
dalusian. Stallions and mares are never ridden, and geld- 
ings only are used for the saddle. They are usually kept in 
extensive pasture-grounds, and driven periodically to the 
corral, when the lazo and spur of the Guacho are employed. 
to remind them of their dependence. When colts are to be 
broken in, they are driven in a herd to the corral, subjected 
one by one to the discipline of the lazo, and by mere force 
and terror reduced to obedience. 

From the conquerors of these noble provinces, the Horse 1 
has passed into the hands of the Indians of the interior, pro- | 


500 THE HORSE. 


ducing a great change in the habits, though but a slight one 
in the moral feelings, of the Red Man of the plains. These 
brave tribes, who have escaped the bondage of so many of their 
fellows, may be said to pass their lives on horseback: their very 
limbs have become feeble from disuse of walking; but they are 
amongst the most perfect horsemen in the world. Naked as 
when they were born, without a saddle, with a bit made: of 
hide, their long light lances in hand, they are ever in motion, 
migrating from place to place as the pasture around them is 
consumed. They have no tents, not even a covering for the 
head ; they have no bread, no cultivated vegetables, no fruits, 
no salt. Their only food is the flesh of their mares, which 
they never ride, or the produce of the chase, which is not 
plentiful. Their whole thoughts and the pleasure of their 
lives are riding and war. “Their system of warfare,” says 
Head, “is more noble, unencumbered, and perfect in its na- 
ture, than that of any nation in the world. When they 
assemble, either to. attack their enemies, or to invade the 
country of the Christians, with whom they are now at war, 
they collect large troops of horses and mares, and then utter- 
ing the wild shriek of war, they start at a gallop. As soon 
as the horses they ride on are tired, they vault upon the 
bare backs of fresh ones, keeping their best until they posi- 
tively see their enemies. The whole country affords pasture 
to their horses, and whenever they choose to stop, they have 
only to kill some mares. ‘The ground is the bed on which, 
from their infancy, they have always slept; the flesh of their 
mares is the food on which they have ever been accustomed 
to subsist.”” These wild people have not yet acquired fire- 
arms, which might render them the most formidable of caval- 
ry; but they have learned the use of intoxicating liquors, 
which they obtain by barter from the towns. They have 
some rude ideas of a future state, believing that, when they 
die, they will be transferred to a paradise, where they will be 
always drunk, and always on horseback. As they gallop over 
the plains at night, we are told, they will point, with their 


ome 
_— 


Ait Raia recta ale male geillatDiat epi ienianiaintinmmicmma aes ) 


HISTORY. 50L 


long spears, to constellations in the heavens, which, they 
say, are the figures of their ancestors, who, riding in the fir- 


mament, are mounted upon horses swifter than the wind, and: 


hunting ostriches. When they bury their dead, they kill 


several of their best horses, believing that their departed. 


friends would otherwise have nothing to ride.* 
The Horse is domesticated throughout all the settled ‘iil 


of South America, but is nowhere treated with the care which 


is required to produce the full development of his form and 
useful properties. If he is inferior in many qualities to the 
races from which he is sprung, we may be assured that this 
is no result of the absence of the bounties of nature in the 
countries to which he has been carried. These are all that 
can be desired for the perfecting of the Horse. If, in cer- 
tain parts, a too humid atmosphere, and rank vegetation, 
are calculated to give grossness to the animal form, there 


are others embellished with every gift that can give to it: 


lightness, buoyancy, and grace. There are regions more 
pure of air than the Caucasian Mountains, or the Syrian 


Plains; and were but a tenth part of the care bestowed on. 
rearing the Horse in these beautiful countries as in the de-. 


serts of the wandering Bedouin, it cannot be doubted that 


South America would produce Horses equal to any in the. 


world. 


North America seems equally adapted to the temperament 


of the Horse as any similar countries in the Old Continent.. 


The Mexican horses are derived from Spain, and seem in no. 


other respect inferior to the European, than a less careful 
management may account for. Mexican horses have likewise 
escaped into the woods and gavannahs of the prodigious 
countries which extend northward and eastward from the 


Gulf of Mexico; but they have not multiplied in the same: 


numbers as in the plains of the Plata. They have extended 


northward even to the Rocky Mountains, and the sources. 


* Head’s Journey. 


— aR eRe mr Ce 
evan ene r mre 


502 THE HORSE. 


of the Columbia, in the 52d or 53d parallel of latitude. The 
Indians of the country have learned to pursue and capture 
them, employing them in hunting and transporting their fami- 
lies from place to place; the first great change that has taken 
place for ages in the condition of the Red Man of the North — 
American woods. The highest ambition, we are told, of the 
young Indian of these northern tribes is to possess a good 
horse for the chase of the buffalo. The Ossages form large 
hunting parties for the chase of horses in the country of the 
Red Canadian River, using relays of fresh horses, until they 
have run down the wild herds. The horses in these parts 
are yet more precious in the estimation of the Indians, than 
in the countries of the South, where they have multiplied 
more. To steal the horse of an adverse tribe, Dr Richardson 
informs us, is considered by the people as an exploit nearly 
as heroic as the killing of an enemy; and the distances they 
will travel, and the privations they will undergo, in these 
predatory excursions, are scarcely to be believed. So pre-~ 
cious do they hold this new gift, that, in some cases, an In- 
dian who owns a horse will scarcely continue to sleep after 
nightfall, but will sit at the opening of his hut, with the 
halter in one hand, and his gun in the other, the horse’s legs 
at the same time being tied with thongs of leather. Not- 
withstanding of all his care, it sometimes happens that the 
wearied hunter, suffering himself to be overcome by sleep 
for a few minutes, is awakened by the noise of the thief gal- 
loping off with his plunder. 

The Anglo-Americans, the Canadians, and the European 
Colonists of the West India Islands, have all acquired the 
domesticated horse. The horses of Canada, chiefly of French 
lineage, are coarse and small, but hardy, muscular, and use- 
ful. Those of the United States are of every variety, de- 
rived. originally from England, but crossed by the modern 
English racer, and even by the horses of Syria and Arabia. 
From this cause, and the great variety and extent of these 
countries, the inhabitants of the States have a very mixed 


ae 


CLASSES AND BREEDS OF BRITISH HORSES. 503 


race of horses, many of which are excellent. It is the cha- 
racter of this people to carry ardour and boldness of execu- 
tion into every favoured pursuit, and the improvement of 
their horses at this time occupies much of their attention. 
They are fond of horse-races, particularly in the Southern 
States, and have adopted, to a certain degree, the usages of 
the English Turf. The nature of their country leads them 
to cultivate useful horses for the road, and for their innu- 
merable private and public carriages. They prefer the trot 
to the paces more admired in the Old Continent; and, hay- 
ing directed attention to the conformation which consists 
with this character, the fastest trotting horses in the world 
are to be found in the United States. The breeds of the 
West India Islands are those of the parent states. The 
horses of Cuba are derived from Spain, and retain the dis- 
tinctive characters of the parent stock. Those of the Eng- 
lish Colonies have been improved by the continued inter- 
course with the mother country. 


CLASSES AND BREEDS OF BRITISH HORSES. 


When Junius Cassar landed amongst the Belgz on the 
shores of Kent, about fifty-four years before our common era, 
he found the natives possessed of Horses, which they used 
for cavalry, or attached to chariots of war, after the manner 
of the Assyrians, the Persians, and other people of the East 
in the first ages, of the Egyptians in the remotest times, and 
of the Greeks in the era termed Heroic. The early use of 
the Horse, in a manner thus artificial, by nations so remote 
from one another as the inhabitants of Celtic Britain and the 
first civilized communities of the East, may be regarded as 
one of the many proofs derived from history, from language, 
and from similarity of customs, religious and social, of the 
pristine relation between these early settlers of Europe and 


504 THE HORSE. 


_ the people of Western Asia, who used the same engine of 
war. The most simple and natural manner of reducing the 
Horse to subjection, is by making him bear the burden of his 
rider; and it may be assumed that this was the method of 
domestication which preceded that of attaching him to an 
armed equipage, the construction of which infers a certain 
advancement in the useful arts. It cannot be believed 
that the scattered tribes which peopled Europe during the 
earlier periods of colonization, had themselves devised a me- 
thod of using the Horse so little suited to their wants, and 
to the countries of marsh, forest, and mountain, over which 
they were spread. Itis more consonant with reasonable pro- 
bability to suppose, that the early settlers brought with them 
the practice from the countries from which they were them- 
selves derived. 

Of the pristine inhabitants of Europe, we know nothing 
whatever ; but, with respect to its later inhabitants, the most 
reasonable supposition is, that they were derived from Asia, 
and that they had spread themselves, in the manner of colo- 
nists, westward; first, the Celtic and other allied people, 
from the south of the line of the Caucasus ; and, Secondly, at 
unknown and posterior epochs, when population had extended 
northward into the regions known generally and vaguely to 
the ancients as Scythia and Sarmatia, the other settlers, who 
gave origin to the Scandinavian, the modern German, and 
other nations, commonly comprehended under the general 
term Teutonic, or, less correctly, Gothic. These migrations 
may be supposed to have followed one after another, slowly 
westward, like wave succeeding wave ; and the latter settlers, 


pressing upon the former ones, either dispossessed them, or 
became mingled with them. But whatever be the particu- 
lar history. of these pristine movements, two races of men, 
at least, were found, in the course of ages, inhabiting West- 
ern Europe, distinguished from one another by speech, by 
social habits, and religious observances; the first of which 
the Celt may be considered as the type, and the latter 


pitseuniiindiaimmeen nate ck = aN A a Rien aaa e tesa ae 3 


CLASSES AND BREEDS OF BRITISH HORSES. 505. 


usually denominated Teutones or Gothi; the one, it has been 
said, apparently derived from the countries south of the line 
of the Caucasus, the other from the ruder regions extending 
northward. The southern emigrants were usually found in 
patriarchal communities of tribes or clans, generally dis- 
united, and at war with one another, or only combined for 
the purpose of aggression or mutual defence. The people 
were submissive to authority, and had an order of priests of 
great influence and power, who taught the immortality and 
transmigration of the soul, worshipped in groves, erected 
altars and sacred enclosures of unhewn stone, of which innu- 
merable remains are yet spread over Europe,—paid, like the 
Persian Magi, a reverence to fire, to the heavenly bodies, 
and to certain plants,—and adopted the horrid rite of human 
sacrifices, as practised by the Phoenicians and other Syrians. 
On the other hand, the ultra-Caucasian or Scythian colonists 
formed larger communities, under a system rather feudal 
than patriarchal. The people, although influenced by a wild 
superstition, were tenacious of individual rights, like the free 
| Scythians in every age. They had horses, whose flesh they 
sometimes used as food, and which they offered up in sacri- 
fices to their divinities, but which, so far as is known, they 
never attached to chariots of war, like the true Celta. 

The Celt, continually pressed upon and driven westward, 
were found, at the period of the Roman conquests, in Spain, 
Gaul, part of Germany, and the Islands of Britain ; and the 
latter Islands appear to have been in their exclusive posses- 
sion at the time of the Roman invasion. Some, indeed, have. 
supposed, that at this period a nation of Gothic origin had 
found its way to Britain, and occupied, under the name of Belge, 


the part of the country where Cxsar landed. This is probable ; | 


but, at the same time, the Belgw rather appear to have been. 
themselves a Celtic people, at least the testimony of Strabo, 
and the description which Cesar gives of them, seem to shew 
that they were a race differing in no essential respects from 
the other Britons. But be this as it may, it was not for many 


allah gs 


506 THE HORSE, 


ages afterwards, during the decline of the Roman empire, 
that the really Gothic nations found their way in such num- 
bers into Britain, as to reduce the greater part of it to sub- 
jection, and impose upon it their customs, laws, and language. 
At the time of our Saviour, and long afterwards, the inhabi- 
tants of these Islands were essentially Celtic; and that the 
same race had inhabited the country from an early time, ap- 
pears from innumerable remains of ancient forts, sepulchral 
tumuli and cairns, rude altars, and circles of stones and other 
monuments, which can be referred to no other race but the 
Celtic; and from the names of mountains, rivers, promon- 
tories, and other natural objects, which to this hour retain 
the designations imposed upon them by the Celtic inhabi- 
tants. 

When these Islands, then, became the prey of Roman am- 
bition, the horses of the country were those of the Celtic 
natives, either brought in a state of domestication from the 
East, or derived from the wild races existing in the wastes 
of Europe. That they were in great numbers, we learn from 
the Roman writers. Cesar continually refers to the daring 
cavalry and destructive chariots by which he was opposed. 
At his landing, the Britons, spurring their horses into the 
sea, assailed his legions ere they could reach the shore. In 
his first expedition, he merely saw the country which he came 
to subdue. In his second, he followed the Britons into the 
interior, and, fording the Thames, he routed on its banks 
their great leader Cassivelaunus, who, he tells us, having 
lost all hopes of success by battle, disbanded the greatest 
part of his forces, and retained about 4000 chariots, with 
which he harassed the Romans as occasion offered. Sub- 
sequent writers speak of the horsemen and charioteers of 
the Celtic Britons. Tacitus, in describing the last great 
battle which the Caledonii fought with Agricola near the 
passes of the Grampians, states that their first line was in 
the plain, and the next on the sloping ascent of the moun- 
tains, and that the space between the armies was filled with 


— 


CLASSES AND BREEDS OF BRITISH HORSES. 607 


the cavalry and charioteers of the Britons rushing to and 
fro with loud noise. They rushed, he tells us, in their armed 
chariots at full speed, and mixed in battle with the infantry. 
Their first impression struck terror, but their career was 
soon checked by the thick ranks of their enemies and by the 
inequalities of the ground, and, crowding upon one another, 
they were thrown into disorder. Chariots without a guide, 
and horses without a rider, broke away in wild confusion, and 
trampled upon the ranks. The horses of the country, it is 
certain, must’ have been numerous when they formed the 
strength of an army in a country so wild and mountainous. 
Whatever was the character of these early Horses with 
respect to size, strength, and other properties, it is probable 
that for many ages they underwent little change. Previous 
to the fall of the Roman Empire, northern pirates had ravaged 
the coasts of Britain, and fixed themselves In some of the 
remoter Islands. But it was not till the fifth century that. 
Gothic hordes began those regular invasions which termi- 
nated in the subjection of nearly all the Island, and the im- 
position of a new language and new customs on the people. 
They seem first to have landed in numbers on the shores of 
the Firth of Forth, although history usually refers their first 
permanent settlement to an invitation of the Romanized Bri- 
tons of the south for protection from the ravages of the 
northern tribes. However this be, it is certain that about. 
the year 449, when the falling Empire could no longer pro- 
tect the distant provinces, the Saxons, a Gothic people from 
the countries of the Elbe, landed in South Britain, and being 
followed by successive swarms of Saxons, J utes, and Angles, 
their countrymen, continually disembarking on the country 
from the Forth to the shores of Kent, established a domi- 


-nion which, by creating a new nation, may be said to have 


affected the whole condition of societies throughout the civi- 


lized world. 
The supremacy of the Saxons in England lasted for more 


than 600 years, when it was overthrown by the Normans, a 


508 THE HORSE. 


mixed class of military adventurers from the north of Eu- 
rope, of Scandinavian lineage. Scotland during this period. 
had continued essentially Celtic, with the exception of the 
kingdom of the Lothians, extending from the Forth to the 
Tweed, which had been early colonized by Saxons; and, 
with the exception of a portion of the extreme north, colo- 
nized by Scandinavians. The Celtic inhabitants of North 
Britain were known to the Romans as Caledonii, and some- 
times as Picti, although the latter term is by many antiqua- 
ries supposed to indicate a distinct race of men. In the 
third century, in the reign of Dioclesian, we first hear of 
another people, certainly Celtic, who were to give their 
name to the whole of North Britain. These were the Sceite 
or Scots, the Scoti and Scotice gentes of the Roman writers, 
who, landing from the north-east of Ireland on the nearest 
coasts, gradually extended their power. In the beginning 
of the sixth century, they had occupied the Peninsula ‘of 
Caentir or Cantire, and they gradually advanced northward 
and eastward until about the year 843, when they had ac-. 
quired the ascendency over nearly all the native tribes, giv- 
ing that name to the whole of North Britain, which it will 
for ever retain. 

In the year of our Lord 1066, that is, 605 years after the 
first settlement of Saxons in England, the dominion of the 
Anglo-Saxon princes was overthrown by an army of Normans. 
But by this time a new race of men had been formed, of mixed 


lineage, but now possessed of a common language, and mould- 
ed to a common standard of national character. Scotland 


was never subjected to the Normans ; but in thirty-one years 
after the Norman Conquest, a race of Scoto-Saxon princes 
succeeded to the Scottish crown, and from that time the 
Saxon speech and customs rapidly extended over all the | 
Lowlands of Scotland. . 

Coincidently in time with the Saxons in England, the rem- 
nants of the Britons existed in Wales, and preserved a brave 
independence in the mountains and fastnesses of that coun- 


= nn nena lt 0 geet ig te 9 aes Sp Se me ion NIT NEE RRR MB it eed a ad rg, 


CLASSES AND BREEDS OF BRITISH HORSES. 509 


try. ‘They preserved the native Horse; but it does not ap- 
pear that they ever made the least figure as horsemen, in 
which respect they resembled other Celtic nations who have 
occupied countries of mountains. 

The Saxons, though a Gothic nation, were little given to 
the multiplying of Horses ; and it does not appear that they 
ever became distinguished as horsemen in their new country. 
Tt cannot be supposed that they transported many horses to 
a country already possessed of them, in the small and dan- 
Serous vessels with which they navigated the northern seas ; 
and therefore it may be assumed that, up to the period of the 
Norman Conquest in England, and for many centuries after- 
wards in Scotland, the Horses of the country remained esgen- 
tially the same as when the Romans first encountered them 


_in the battle-chariots of the Celta. 


But the Normans were ardently devoted to the Horse, as 


* an instrument of their wars and silvan exercises. William I. 


transported with him a numerous cavalry, to which he mainly 
owed the first victory which enabled him to give law to the 
country, and his rude successors and feudatories retained in 
after ages the Norman tastes in what regarded the Horse. 
War and the chase occupied the thoughts of these barba- 
rians, and the barons and great vassals of the Crown, amongst 
whom the wretched kingdom was partitioned, carried the 
Norman passion for the Horse to their newly-acquired pos- 
sessions. But the Normans, although they conquered the 
country, did not, like the Saxons, colonize it. They forced 
upon it their laws and polity, but were too few in num- 
bers to alter essentially the characters, the language, or, 
for many ages, the social habits of thé people. Neverthe- 
less, with the conquest of the Normans began a change in 
the Horses of England. The communication with France, 
the Low Countries, and the neighbouring parts of Germany, 
being opened, horses superior to those of the ancient Bri- 
tons and Anglo-Saxons could be obtained. Then, too, was 
the age of chivalry, of heavy-armed knights, and men-at- 


Y 
= 


Gaede 


“~~ 5 


vy 
| 


3 


ee 


Pe ~~ 
eA RN TNT NE A 


i 


aa 


me amp seem 


510 THE HORSE. 


arms, for whom horses of good strength and size were re- 
quired. The great Black Horse of Flanders and the plains 
of Germany was in especial request; and our earlier re- 
cords shew that the Norman princes largely resorted to 
these countries for supplying their studs and armies. The 
Crusades, too, had conveyed a knowledge of those gay and 
elegant steeds which happier climes and distant lands pro- 
duced ; and by degrees horses from Spain and Italy, Bar- 
bary and the countries of the Levant, found their way to the 
land of the Anglo-Normans. King John, during his troubled 
reign, found time to devote his attention to the improvement 
of the native Horse. He imported at one time a hundred 
stallions from Flanders. Edward II. imported Horses from 
Lombardy; and Edward III. took yet more active means to 
obtain the horses of foreign countries. The annals of his 
reign shew that he was indebted in large sums to the Prince 
of Hainault and other powers, for horses obtained for the 
supply of his cavalry. He devoted the sum, great in those 
days, of 1000 merks for the purchase of Spanish stallions. 
While eager to avail himself of foreign horses to improve 
the native races, and pursue his wars, he resolved that other 
countries should not reap a corresponding advantage. He. 
prohibited the exportation of horses from England under 
heavy penalties, and succeeding princes continued the sys- 
tem; and up to the reign of Elizabeth, it was felony to carry 
horses even from England to Scotland. In these ages, then, 
it appears that not only were the larger horses fitted for 
heavy armour and the tournament brought into England, but 
by degrees the lighter and more active horses of the South 
and East; and the employment of fusees in war, and the 
gradual change of heavy armour, led to a more general pre- 
ference of horses of lighter form and easy action. Henry 
VIII. was the last of the English kings who maintained the 
usages of chivalry. But even he saw the superiority of the 
finer horses of the South and East, and imported them in 
some numbers from Turkey, Naples, and Spain, for the im- 
9 


CLASSES AND BREEDS OF BRITISH HORSES. 511 


provement of the Royal stud. Yet, with all the inconsis- 
tency and stupid barbarity of his character, he determined to 
keep up the size of the great horses of England. He en- 
acted that all ‘his prelates and nobles, ‘“‘ whose wives wore 
velvet bonnets,” should keep stallions for the saddle at least 
fifteen hands high. He-caused an act to be passed that all 
stallions found on commons below a certain size should be 
confiscated, and that any mare or filly not likely to bear foals 
of a reasonable Size, or to do profitable labours, Should, at 
the discretion of the drivers of the commons, be killed and 
buried. These monstrous edicts, could they have been car- 
ried into effect, would have thinned the number of useful 
horses in England, already reduced by the destructive wars 
of the houses of York and Lancaster. So great had been 
the decline in the number of horses in England, that Queen 
Elizabeth could only muster about 3000 cavalry when the 
terrible Armada of Spain threatened her kingdom with de- 
struction. Contemporary writers give us no high idea of the 
English horses at this period. They are described as strong 
and sturdy indeed, but as fit only for draught. The coarse 
cart-horse form was the prevailing one, even for horses em- 
ployed in the chase. We see then, that, up to this period, no 
very great change had taken place in the general character 
of the horses of England. By the foreign importations, in- 
deed, a class of horses had been formed called Running 
Horses. These were not exclusively devoted to the race, but 
were merely distinguished for a somewhat superior power of 


speed. During the reign of Elizabeth, the use of heavy ° 


armour went gradually into disuse, notwithstanding -the 
jousts and sports of the tilting-yard, which were still eagerly 
pursued. When James I. ascended the throne, these sports 
were in the wane, and he afforded them little support. James 
had no fondness for warlike exercises. He is Said to have 
observed that he loved armour, because it both prevented 
the wearer of it from being hurt himself and from hurting 
others. He, however, gave great encouragement to a sport 


pei icicnembdiiaadioat parcenage ee a i rie meer its cent eens 


512 THE HORSE. 


which has exercised an important influence on the characters 
of the Horses of the country. This was the Horse-race, 
which laid the foundation of a system by which a breed of 
horses was formed solely for running. The system was per- 
fected in the reign of Charles II., and from this period a 
vast care has been bestowed in breeding a race of horses 
exclusively devoted to the Course. This has been effected 
by mixing the blood of the horses of the warmer countries 
with that of the horses of England, and breeding from the 
best of the mixed progeny. The horses imported were 
chiefly from Africa, from Asiatic Turkey, and ultimately 
from Arabia. The Barbs came generally from Morocco and 
Fez, and the Turks from Smyrna and other ports of the 
Levant; the Arabs generally from the deserts adjoming 
Syria. From the reign of King James to that of Queen 
Anne, in the beginning of last century, the imported horses 
were Barbs and Turks, but chiefly Barbs, which had there- 
fore the greatest share in forming the original characters of 
the English Race-horse. The pure Arabs were chiefly in- 
troduced in the early part of the last. century. They con- 
tinue to be imported up to the present day, but in diminished 
numbers, and with little effect on the existing race, whose 
characters have been long formed. 

When the system of the Turf was perfected, those horses 
only were able to contend in the race which possessed in the 
requisite degree the property of speed; and as this property 
is derived from animals possessed of the same virtue, the 
horses used for the turf came to be distinguished by their 
pedigree ; and all may be traced by the parents to horses of 

the South and East, which had been mingled in blood with 
the pre-existing race. The pedigrees of horses which claim 
the privilege of running, or rather which possess the proper- 
ties of speed in a sufficient degree to enable them to run, 
have been preserved with jealous care, so that there has 
been formed a privileged class which may be termed horses 
of noble blood, as amongst the Circassians and Arabs. The 

2 


Se ee aa ic BR pee er eee eget a ee 


CLASSES AND BREEDS OF BRITISH HORSES. 513 


! 
horses of this caste or family being made to breed with one | 
another, its characters became permanent, and a distinct i] 
breed, in the proper sense of the word, was produced. The i 
triumph of art was complete, and the breed produced, for 
a combination of strength with the power of rapid motion, it 
became unequalled in the world, excelling in fleetness the | | 
horses of the Arabian deserts, and surpassing in strength . 
and beauty the chariot steeds of the Olympic games. It . 
was not merely by mixing the blood of the African and | 
Asiatic horses with those of England that the full end was \ | 
arrived at. It was by continued reproduction between the | We 
descendants of the mixed stock, selecting for breeding those | 

| 
f 


which possessed the characters required. Foreign nations | 
are desirous to obtain the Race-Horse of England for im- _ 
proving the native breeds, and to this end these noble horses _ 
are eminently suited; but this of itself will not form a race 
of horses possessed of permanent characters. To effect this, 
the long-continued care of breeding is required, until a race 
‘Shall be formed having that identity and permanence of pro- we 
perties which constitute a true breed of any kind. To the | 
_ class of characters which distinguish the horses of Africa : 
and the southern parts of Western Asia from those of the 
colder countries is applied the technical term “ blood ;” anda 
horse is termed a “ blood- horse”? which possesses these cha- . . i] 


racters in an eminent degree. Thus, while many of our horses 

possess more or less of the characters denoted by the term 

blood, the term Blood-horse is limited to the race whose espe- 
cial destination is the Course ; and to this race of horses is i 
likewise applied the term Thoroughbred, which is s regarded 3 43 | 
as the more precise and sportsmanlike. ; . 
The formation of this race of horses, of mixed lineage, yet ; 
moulded to a common standard, and capable of transmitting ; Ht 
the characters acquired to their remoter descendants, hag an ) 
important relation to the history of the breeds of horses” H th 
existing in the British Islands. Not only have the indige- : | 
nous races their peculiar characters, acquired by the in- | ey 
2K 


514 THE HORSE, 


fluence of climate, soil, and food, but they have the charac- 
ters communicated to them by a mixture of the blood of the 
superior race. The thoroughbred horses of England have 
been employed to a vast extent to communicate the proper-. 
ties of increased action and spirit to the inferior races. By 
this mean all the larger horses used for the saddle, for the 
chase, for cavalry, for the innumerable lighter carriages of 


every kind, nay, sometimes for the labour of heavy draught, 
have had their characters modified by an admixture, more or 
less, of what is termed blood. The history and character 
of the British Race-Horse, and the institution of games to 
which it is rendered subservient, will demand a more detailed 
investigation. The effect has been, that a breed of horses 
has been formed, of peculiar lineage and characters, and 
been mingled in blood with the native varieties in every de- 
gree. In this manner, certain properties have been com- 
municated to the inferior races, and varieties have been mul- 
tiplied without limits. Not only does there exist the diver- 
sity of what may be termed natural breeds, but those fur- 
ther differences produced by the greater or less degree of 
breeding communicated to individuals. Many remain with 
little or no admixture of the blood of the Race-Horse, and 
so may be regarded as native breeds or families ; but others 
are so mixed with the superior Horses, or with one another, 
that they cannot be treated of as Breeds, but must be re- 
garded as Classes, suited to particular uses. 

Of the races which have no mixture of the blood of the 
Race-Horse, one inhabits the Islands of Zetland. _These 
are the least in size of any of the varieties produced in the 
British Islands. They resemble the ponies of Norway, 
| Sweden, and Iceland, but they exhibit likewise traces of 
} mixture, which may be derived partly from ancient, and 
partly from modern times. It is not certainly known whether 
these desolate islands were inhabited at all when first oc- 
cupied by Scandinavian plunderers ; but being taken posses- 
sion of, they long continued attached to the Crown of Norway, 


= ate ats la A al ang SO a ions memepyeme ni anhalt meinasnacamaitaiins a sa eae RR 


CLASSES AND BREEDS OF BRITISH HORSES. 515 


and it was not until the 15th century that they became sub- 
ject to the Scoto-Saxon Princes. Their first and most inti- 
mate connexion having been with Norway, it is reasonable to 
Suppose that their horses were derived from that country 5 
or that, if an anterior race existed in the country, it was 
mixed in blood with that of the horses of the Northmen. 
The more recent intermixture may be supposed to have beén 
with the horses of the adjoining islands of Orkney, and in 
later times with those of Scotland proper. But. tradition 


refers to a further intermixture with the horses of Spain, 


when the terrible Armada of Philip pursued its disastrous 
flight round the extreme north of Scotland. Many of the 
huge galleons and smaller vessels of that ill-fated expedition 
were stranded on the Zetland shores, and others found refuge 
in the creeks and natural bays of the country. It is further 
known that the Spanish ships were largely supplied with 
horses ; and it may therefore be believed that some of these 
Spanish horses were left behind, which could not fail to im- 
press their characters on thoge of the Islands, probably few 
in number, and held in little esteem. But this supposition 
is almost confirmed by the aspect and properties of many of 
the existing race, numbers of which are extremely handsome, 
are fleeter in proportion to their size than any of the other 
ponies of Scotland, and tend very generally to the brown or 
bay colour, characteristic of the horses of southern climates. 

But whatever be the origin or degree of mixture with other 
races of the horses of Zetland, their diminutive size marks 
the influence of a rigorous climate and scanty nourishment. 
Their ordinary height is about 36 inches, or 9 hands; many 
of them do not exceed 74 hands, or 30 inches; and some fal] 
even below the latter standard. 

These little horses in their native islands are left almost 
in the state of nature until they are caught for use. They 
have no shelter from the continued storms of tempestuous 
seas, beyond what the crags, ravines, and sides of hills, afford ; 
and they scarcely ever receive any food but what they can 


516 THE HORSE. 


collect on the sedgy bogs, the heathy hills, and barren shores 
of the country. They are thickly covered with a coat of 
long hair, which becomes felted upon them like a garment 
during the inclement season. Their colour is generally bay 
or brown, sometimes mixed with white, and often it is of a 
dullish black, and sometimes piebald. They are sagacious 
and cunning, stealing into the patches of growing corn when 
opportunity offers. They are gentle, and easily reduced to 
obedience, and when domesticated and kindly treated, ex- 
hibit almost as much sagacity as a dog. They will enter 
an apartment and receive crumbs from the table, and stretch 
~ themselves on the floor. They have sometimes been put in 
hampers, and thus carried to a distance. They are in great 
request for equestrian exhibitions, and are more easily trained 
to the feats required than any other kind of horses. Thus 
they may be made to leap through hoops, and in passing a 
bar, to stoop beneath it, or leap over, as directed. The chief 
demand for them is for saddle-horses for children. They — 
are the safest animals that can be used for this purpose; and 
as the demand is considerable, and would be much greater 
were the supply more extended, there is good reason for 
directing attention to the rearing of them, and preserving 
those peculiarities of size and form which give them their 
value. 

The Orkney Islands possess likewise their breeds of ponies ; 
but they are of more mixed descent, and of larger size and 
coarser form, than those of Zetland. These islands, the Ore 
of the ancient British, were discovered by the Roman fleet, 
which, by command of Agricola, sailed round the Island. 
They early formed the haunt of northern rovers; and, to- 
wards the end of the 9th century, were reduced to subjection 
by Harold Harfagre, the Norwegian, who established a dy- 
nasty of Earls, who reduced Caithness, and parts of Suther- 
land, Ross, and Cromarty, and made themselves be felt for 
ages as the terror of the neighbouring coasts. In the year 
1468, the Orkney, together with the Zetland Islands, were 


Sas petaneneslasoesetsendhemndy Tershe elie adntnai-yn-putsdinpmaprceeseesnerees ooeecene ee ad 


given in pledge to King James III. as the dowry of his wife 
Margaret, the daughter of Christian, King of Denmark ; 
a | and, in 1472, they were annexed to the Crown of Scotland, 

. by an act of the Scottish Parliament. The early conque- 
rors of these islands were pirates; and, fighting on foot, 
made little use of the Horse in battle; so that the horses of 
the country were probably few in numbers. Those which it 

' now possesses are small, although, in the progress of culti- 
vation, others of a larger size have been introduced. They’ \ 
are mostly of a dull black colour marked with white, or | 7 
dun marked with the dark streak along the spine, charac- y, 
teristic of a widely diffused family. A few are white, and. Wg 
some piebald, which has been ascribed to the wreck of a | 
number of white German stallions, which took place in the 
latter part of last century. \q 


CLASSES AND BREEDS OF BRITISH HORSES. 517 . 
' 


em nn ee tere 
——am1««! 7" ~ gael ; 
-aaipapenaepee on 


ams 


intl snesnsetliBig, asada omaieedaitinaanionatddiamantitenae cs an, Lectee ciate ae 
wee wie 


The Hebudes of the Roman geographers, by an early error He 


of Islands ; the first, the Outer Hebrides, consisting of Lewis, 

Harris, and others, lying out in the western ocean, and ex- 

tending in a long chain of about 140 miles ; the second, the 

Inner Hebrides, lying nearer the coast, and stretching from | 

Bute, in the Firth of Clyde, to Skye on the coast of Ross. 

These numerous and gloomy islands were, beyond a doubt, pos- . f 
i 
. 


of transcription, changed into Hebrides, consist of two groups ; 
. 


/ sessed by the same Celtic race which peopled the other parts 
| of Britain, as is attested by the existing names of places and 

natural objects, which have survived many bloody changes, 

and by the like rude monuments as extend from Cornwall to 

the ancient Ore,—from Wilts to the mountains of Kerry. == 

But the same ferocious seamen who ravaged the northern . 

islands, formed settlements in these. In the Outer Hebrides, 
| Scandinavian names have generally supplanted the Gaelic, 
1 and the language of the people is mixed with the Frisian and 
Norse. ‘The Inner Hebrides were not so long and wholly 
subject to these strangers, and the Gaelic names accordingly 
prevail over the Scandinavian. The conquerors of these iit 
as islands cared for the sea, and made little use of horses. { 


518 THE HORSE. 


Nevertheless, all the islands of any magnitude produce 
horses in considerable numbers., Those of the Outer He- 
brides are small, round-shouldered, muscular, and thickly 
clad with long hair. Those of the Inner Hebrides are usu- 
ally of somewhat larger stature. The best of them used to 
be produced in Mull, Barra, and Islay ; and here, too, tradi- 
tion refers to changes produced by the horses of the wrecked 
Armada, a part of which having rounded the North Cape, 
found its way to these dangerous coasts. It is abundantly pro- 
bable that here, as elsewhere, some of the stranger horses 
were left behind; but no such traces exist in the present 
horses of the country as can enable us to refer them to 
Spanish lineage. They are mostly of a brownish-black 
eolour, some brown, bay, or dun, some of a dull cream colour, 
and some gray. They have the common characters of round 
shoulders, stout limbs, and short upright pasterns. They are 
hardy in a high degree, but they have little speed. They have 
lost much of the reputation which they once possessed. Be- 
ing employed in carrying loads when young, they are gene- 
rally bent in the back, and otherwise thrown out of shape. 
No eare is bestowed in selection, and the best of them being 
picked up by dealers, those that remain suffer continued de: 
terioration, so that it is now difficult to obtain a tolerable 
pony in places where a few years ago they were numerous. 
It will scarcely be credited, that numbers of them have been 
recently bought by dealers to be’ fattened and sold as Irish 
beef. Yet the demand for a better class of them exists, suf- 
ficient to induce attention to the breeding of them, and they 
‘would become a valuable production of the country, were the 


most ordinary care bestowed on their improvement. But it is 
painful to state, that the condition of the greater part of these 
lonely islands is far from being one of much advancement, 
notwithstanding that the extended communication by steam 
is eminently calculated to promote their industry and pros- 
perity. The proprietors are generally non-resident; the 
farms, as in Ireland, are divided into miserable possessions, 


ete NaRINN Scariest nate ee enn eegeenatnmnn nore ee ame 


CLASSES AND BREEDS OF BRITISH HORSES. 519 


at excessive rents; and the mass of the people accordingly 

are in such a state of penury as to preclude a beneficial em- 

ployment of their industry. 

The same kind of horses extends to the neighbouring parts 

of Argyleshire, and, with some change of characters, depend- 
_ ent on the greater elevation and productiveness of the heathy 
pastures, through all the central and northern Highlands. 
The prevailing colour is a dull brownish-black. They have 4 
abundant hair, stout limbs, and short pasterns. They have | 1a 
good feet, and are sure-footed and hardy in the highest de- 
gree. They are well suited for climbing mountains, and mani- ' 
fest great sagacity in making their way through swamps and di 
bogs; but they are lazy and slow, and altogether destitute 
of the fire and mettle distinctive of the Arabs, the Barbs, and 
other horses of warmer climates. They are carried in con- 
siderable numbers to the low country, where they are valued 
for their power of subsisting on scanty food, and enduring 
careless treatment. 

The mountains of Wales, in like manner, give birth to a 
race of small horses, adapted to an elevated country of scanty 
herbage. The Cambro-Britons necessarily depended for pro- 
tection on their foot soldiers, and not on their cavalry, and 
never appear to have been distinguished as horsemen in the 
mountainous country which they so valiantly defended. From 
their laws and chronicles we learn some curious details re- 
garding their horses. Hywelda or Howell, surnamed the : 

Good, who lived in the tenth century, condescended to legis- iq 
late on every subject of household and general economy. He { 
fixed the price of all things to be bought and sold within his 
dominions, from horses to cats. The price of a foal under 
fourteen days old was to be 4d., of one a year and a day old 4 
48d., and so on. He turned his royal thoughts to the tricks 
of horse-dealers, a class of persons who seem in every age to ? : 
have adopted the maxim of never speaking the truth in mat- | 
ters of trade. For every blemish discovered in a horse after 
: sale, one-third of the money was to be returned, except the 


* 


520 THE HORSE. 


blemish should be on the ears or tail! The buyer was to 
have a certain time allowed him to ascertain whether the 
horse was free from three diseases, namely, three nights for 
the staggers, three months for the wind, and a year for the 
glanders. Whoever borrowed a horse and rubbed the hair 
off, so as to gall the back, was to pay 4d.; if the skin was 
forced into the flesh, 8d. ; if the flesh was forced to the bone, 
16d. No horse was to be used in the plough ; but he was to 
be brought up as a serving horse or palfrey, and his price 
was then to be 120d, Horses can only be supposed to have 
been valuable from the smallness of their numbers when such 
absurdities could have become the laws of even the pettiest 
province. When the Normans conquered and partitioned 
Wales, other horses than those of the country could not fail 
to be introduced. Roger de Bellesme, afterwards Earl of 
Shrewsbury, is said to have brought the Spanish Jennet to 
his estate of Powisland, to which circumstance has been as- 
eribed the reputation which the horses of that part of Wales 
once possessed. But whatever changes may have taken 
place in the ancient horses of Wales, it is plain that many 
of those which now possess the country are of mixed lineage. 
In the higher country, indeed, considerable numbers of ponies 
are reared, which may be supposed to be pure with respect 
to their descent from the pristine race. They are much 
neglected, but are usually superior to the ponies of the 
Highlands of Scotland, having better shoulders, finer limbs, 
and superior action. They tend to the lighter colours of 
brown or bay, have good feet, and are sure-footed. But the 
progress of cultivation has caused a class of larger horses, 
suited for draught, to be reared in all the less elevated dis- 
tricts ; which, though useful, hardy, and true to their work, 
are far inferior in symmetry to the race of the mountains. 
In the forest of Dartmoor ig reared a race of ponies, of 
coarse inelegant figures, but hardy, sure-footed, and capable 
of undergoing extreme drudgery; and in the high lands of 
Exmoor is a similar race, but of somewhat smaller size. 


idubisn ian biamietisenedh dee Pe iincliliaiabenttiatiladitiatinticanitticiais ime age to ORES : 


CLASSES AND BREEDS OF BRITISH HORSES. 521 


These little horses are thickly covered with long hair, and 
until caught for use are left nearly wild. They are resolute 
and cunning, ascending the rocky eminences when pursued, | 
leaping from blocks of rock, or even jumping over their pur- Va 
suers when hemmed in. The New Forest of Hampshire, 
which William the Conquerer converted into a hunting 
ground, by driving away the wretched inhabitants, and burn- 
\ ing all the towns, villages, and churches within a compass of 


ac maetinncntsn Shane ee 


~~ 


a enepenaene en oa 
“re So a Fete 


many miles, long produced a race of ponies, of which the re- 
mains yet exist. They are ugly, large-headed, and short- 
necked, but hardy, sure-footed, and capable of bearing care- . | 
less usage. ; yi 
In like manner, over all the ancient este and forests of 
England, formerly covering the larger part of the surface of 
the country, were reared varieties of horses, the size and 
strength of which bore a relation to the quality and abun- 
dance of the natural herbage. Sometimes they were of the 
pony size, falling short of twelve hands high ; sometimes they Mig 
) reached fourteen hands, and in rarer cases fifteen. They 

{ 


er onl oe en Enea eT Sete 
Sea 


were of coarse form, with short hairy limbs, and were capable 
of much drudgery, but were destitute of elegance, and un- 
suited for speed. From this class were derived the older 
| Pack-horses, which were used throughout the country before 
| roads were formed, and which, until late in the last century, 7 ' 
were the most numerous class of horses employed for draught ‘41g 
or riding. They were good drudges, hardy and sure-footed, 
but wanted action and lightness for the saddle; while, for the 
purposes of labour, they were inferior to the larger horses 
now employed. Numbers of this very ordinary kind of horses 
are yet to ke seen in Cornwall and other hilly parts of Eng- 
land. In the high parts of Devonshire they are still employed 4 
in carrying loads. They are numerous likewise in Ireland, 
and in parts of Scotland; and wherever they exist, exhibit 
that form which the greater part of the horses of these 
Islands possessed, until mingled in blood with the finer races iif 
of Barbary and the East. j | 


PN dling ae a 


siti 
——e 


522 THE HORSE. 


A variety of horses, differing from the ordinary pack-horses 
in their greater lightness and elegance of figure, were termed 
Galloways. They exceeded the pony size, and were greatly 

valued for their activity and bottom. They were derived from 
the countries near the Solway Firth; and an opinion fre- 
quently expressed is, that they had cn early improved by 
horses saved from the wreck of the Armada. There is 
nothing beyond tradition to support this opinion, and it is 
known that the Horses of Galloway were distinguished long 
before the age of the Armada. The nature of the country, 
mountainous, but not heathy and barren, may account for the 
production of a larger race of ponies, without our resorting 
to the supposition of foreign descent, just as the same country 
at the present time produces a peculiar breed of cattle, larger 
than those of the higher mountains, but smaller than those 
of the richer plains. Besides, this part of Scotland was a 
country of forays during the rude border wars of the times, 
when a more agile race than the ordinary pack-horse was 
naturally sought for ; and all along the borders of the two 
-kingdoms, a class of similar properties existed. Many of the 
true Galloways of the western counties were handsome, and 
their general characteristic was activity, and the power of 


enduring fatigue. In former times this breed was in great 


demand in England, and the people of the country where 
they were produced, up to a period not very distant, were 
noted as horse-dealers. In England the term Galloway came 
at length to be applied to horses of a particular size, without 
reference to their origin, and this application of the word is 
still in use. The term Pony is applied to Horses of twelve 
hands or less, the term Galloway, to those of about fourteen 
hands. The finer kinds of Galloways have long disappeared 
in the district which formerly produced them, the farmers 
having cultivated a race of larger size for the purposes of 
labour. 

A race of Horses, of foreign lineage, but long naturalized, 
exists in the West of Ireland, almost unknown to the breed- 


paitdpienaiindivaetpeginideidttinkiidkap rian ap eiahiaadiialderdttemmanttider A EA AT NO ICE RE BN alge? 2c Se eed a 


CLASSES AND BREEDS OF BRITISH HORSES. 523 


ers of England. They inhabit the Connamara district of the , . 
county of Galway. The tradition is, that, from the wreck of i 
some ships of the Spanish Armada on the west coast of Ire- i | . i 
land, in the year 1588, several horses and mares were saved, _ 

_ which continued to breed in the rugged and desolate country | . 
to which they were thus brought. But the aid of tradition i 
is inno degree necessary to prove the origin of these horses, : if f | 
since all their characters are essentially Spanish. They are hy 
from twelve to fourteen hands high, generally of the pre- if i |i 
vailing chestnut colour of the Andalusian horses, delicate in | 
their limbs, and possessed of the form of head characteristic. 
of the Spanish race. They are suffered to run wild and ne-. ft | 


glected in the country of mixed rock and bog which they i 
inhabit, and where they are to be seen galloping in troops | ‘i 
ny 


amongst the rugged rocks of limestone of which the country Pu 
consists. When they are to be caught, which is usually i 
when they are three or four years old, they are driven into i 
the bogs, and haltered. They are hardy, active, sure-footed i 
in aremarkable degree, and retain the peculiar amble of the 
Spanish Jennet. Any selection may be made from the wild 
troops, after being hunted into the bogs; and individuals are, 
obtained at a trifling expense. It must be regarded as pea 
markable that these horses should retain the characters of \ 
their race for so long a period, in a country so different from \ 
that whence they are derived. They have merely become } 
smaller than the original race, are somewhat rounder in the 
croup, and are covered, in their natural state, with shaggy 
hair, the necessary effect of a climate the most humid in 
Europe. From mere neglect of the selection of the parents 

in breeding, many of these little horses are extremely ugly, | 
| yet still conforming to the original type. It would be desir- ’ 
able that the gentlemen of Ireland should direct attention to 
this remarkable race, which would supply a class of horses, 
of the Galloway size, now much wanted. By importing some 
of the best Andalusian stallions, a wonderful change could |e 


{ 
4 
4 


524 THE HORSE. 


be effected in the breed, which would thus be rendered of 
economical importance to the district which produces it. 

But a class of native horses, of great importance, as the 
basis on which have been formed the superior draught-horses 
of the country, consists of the larger breeds of the plains, 
distinguished by their size from the smaller varieties of the 
higher countries, commons, and forests. These horses are 
merely a larger variety of the Pack-Horse. They have stout 
limbs, with long hair at the fetlock and on the legs. They 
are of all colours, with abundant hair, and long bushy manes. 
They are slow and unapt for rapid motion, but capable of 
exerting great physical force in the drawing of loads, or 
bearing of burdens. 

From these native horses, all influenced, with respect to 
size and form, by the nature of the districts in which they 
have been reproduced, are derived, by amalgamation with 
one another, and then by the mixture of foreign blood, the 
endless varieties which are now multiplied throughout the 
country. Some of these varieties possess such a community 
of characters, arising from common descent, or long inter- 
mixture with one another, that they may be regarded as 
families or breeds. But many more cannot be classified in 
this manner, and therefore it has become common to arrange 
the different kinds, not into Breeds founded on common re- 


a§ Semblance, but into Classes founded on the uses to which 


they are applied. Under this kind of arrangement, our 
Horses may be divided into two general classes; first, those 
employed for the saddle and the lighter wheel-carriages, and, 
secondly, those employed in the heavier labours, and which 
are commonly called Draught and Cart Horses. In the first 
class are the Race-Horse, the Hunter, the Coach-Horse, and 
- all the varieties used for the saddle: in the second class are 
the Cart-Horse, the Waggon-Horse, the Dray-horse, and 
others. 


THE RACH-HORSE. 525 


I—THE RACE-HORSE. i. 


The progressive steps have been referred to by which a ; ; ia 
race of Horses has been formed, of recognised lineage, des- 1B 
tined to a particular end, and possessed of a class of com- 
mon characters. Although early importations of the lighter . ha 
Horses of the countries of the Mediterranean had contributed ee. 4 
to form the class termed Running Horses, it was not until | : 
, the reign of James I. that a race of Horses in the country ( /- | 
\% was especially devoted to the Course. James, while in his 1 
native country, had displayed a strong passion for field-sports : | 


and rude horse-races; and, on his accession to the English i 
Crown, he had the means afforded him of gratifying his 
tastes. He soon established regular courses ; and, before 
the expiration of his reign, a code of regulations was formed, : 
_ which became the foundation of the refinements of the mo- id 
dern Turf. Charles I. was not less attached to horse-races i 
than his father, but he brought greater taste and judgment 
to the pursuit ; and he would have been one of the great im- 
provers of the English Horse, but for those civil disturbances i 
which deprived him of repose and life. Notwithstanding ne 
the bloody dissensions of this period, the passion for horse- dig 
racing gained ground amongst the people, whilst the ancient ald 
sports of the tilting-yard declined. Cromwell, with all the q 
severity of his character, shewed no distaste towards these 
pastimes. He had probably the sagacity to perceive the 
national advantages to be derived from improving the Breeds 
of Horses through the medium of popular sports. He culti- 
vated his own stud with care, and did not disdain to exhibit 
his skill of four-in-hand. But it was to Charles II. that the | 
final establishment of horse-racing, as a system and fashion 
of the opulent, is to be ascribed. It was a sport entirely 
suited to his own gay temper, while it was pursued with re- 
newed eagerness by the people, tired of the fanatical seve- 7 
rity of recent times. Charles sent abroad his Master of the __ . {aaa 


526 : THE HORSE. 


Horse to make purchases for his stud. Two Barbs which 
he imported are familiarly known as the Royal Mares, and 
stand the firstin rank amongst the parents of the turf-horses 
in England. He continued all his life to take extraordi- 
nary delight in this amusement. The place where he used to 
sit at Newmarket, surrounded by his joyous Court, can yet 


be pointed out as the King’s Chair. James II. partook 
ot the same feeling, and attempted to pursue the same 
pleasures during his brief and agitated reign. King Wil- 
liam did not disdain this sport of the nation, and paid great 
attention to the improvement of the Royal Stud. Queen 
Anne had a decided taste for the same pursuits, and kept a 
considerable number of race-horses. . Amongst those which 
we read of in the racing annals of the time, are the now well- 
known names of Pepper and Mustard, which seem to have 
been the most successful. The two first Sovereigns of the 
House of Hanover gave way to the public feeling. George III. 
was a judicious patron of the Turf: and George IV., long 
the gay leader of elegance and fashion, was strongly devoted 
to this class of spectacles. 

The lighter horses for speed, introduced previous to the 
reign of James I., were Spaniards, Barbs, and Turks. But 
King James, on his accession to the English Crown, resolved 
to try the Arabian, with which his reading had probably 
rendered him familiar. He purchased a horse of that race. 
imported from the East by an English merchant, Mr Mark- 
ham, for which he paid the sum, great in those days, of 
L.500. This horse, however, in no way distinguished on the 
turf or for his stock, attracted little attention. The Duke of 
Newcastle, who afterwards wrote a remarkable work on 
Horses, took an especial dislike to this Arabian, abused him 
as a bony creature, good for nothing, because, being trained 
to the course, he could not run. This opinion seems to have 
exercised a great influence on the breeders for the turf ; and 
it was not until after the lapse of more than a hundred years 
that the neglected Arabian was again resorted to. During 


8 


THE RACE-HORSE. 527 | 


ESS 


this long period, Barbs, and Turks from the Levant, were the 
horses chiefly imported and mingled in blood with the pre- 
“existing race. 14 4 
Of the foreign horses early introduced into England, one, y 

familiarly known as the White Turk, was the property of e 
Mr Place, the stud-groom of the Lord Protector Cromwell. nie 
Another was brought by the Duke of Berwick from the siege ne 
of Buda, in the reign of James IL; anda third, the Byerly 
Turk, became the most distinguished of all the foreign horses . 
of that period. He was the charger of Captain Byerly, in ae ate ! 
the wars of William in Ireland, about the year 1689. Of 1h 
the lineal descendants of this horse, one was King Herod, out 
born in 1758, bred by his Royal Highness William Duke of y | { 
} 


Cumberland, brother of George If. This fine horse, on re- ©” 
tiring from the turf, was employed as a stallion, and got 497 |_— 
winners at our various race-courses, computed to have gained | \— 
to their owners L.201,505. From the celebrity of Herod oN 
and his stock, it is usual to call the descendants of the 
Byerly Turk the Herod line of horses, and this distinction is 
still recognised by English sportsmen. 

In the latter years of Queen Anne, an Arabian had been 
brought to England, which tended to impress a new charac- : 
ter on the English turf. This animal, the progenitor of some : 
of the finest horses that have perhaps existed in the world, . i 
was purchased at Aleppo by a merchant, the brother of Mr ¥ Crt 4 
Darley of Yorkshire. He wag Supposed to have been of the = 
Desert Breed, although his precise lineage was not deter- / # 
mined. He got the Devonshire or Flying Childers, and 
another horse, termed Bartlett’s Childers, who was never 
trained, but who was the ancestor of Eclipse, one of the 
most remarkable horses of which we have any records. 

The Devonshire or Flying Childers, born in 1715, was so 
named from his breeder Mr Leonard Childers, of Carr House, 
near Doncaster, from whom he was purchased, when young, 4 
by the Duke of Devonshire. He was a chestnut-horse, with il 
four white legs. He was of noble form, of matchless courage, 


528 THE HORSE. 


and the fleetest horse that had ever been upon the English 
turf. He was at first trained as a hunter; but his surpass- 
ing speed being observed, he was translated to the turf. 
About the year 1721, he ran a trial race with two of the 
finest horses of the day. Carrying 9 st. 2]b., he ran over 
the Round Course of Newmarket, 3 miles 4 furlongs and 
93 yards, in 6 minutes and 40 seconds; and over the Beacon 
Course, 4 m. 1 fur. 138 yards, in 7 minutes and 30 seconds. 
iclipse was got by Marske, a grandson of Bartlett’s Chil- 
ders, out of Spiletta. He was foaled in the year 1764, dur- 
ing the eclipse of that year; from which circumstance he 
took his name. He was bred by the Duke of Cumberland, 
and, on the death of that Prince, sold to Mr Wildman, a 
salesman at Smithfield; and afterwards he became the pro- 
perty of Mr O’Kelly. clipse had not the grandeur of form 
of the Flying Childers, and might have escaped notice, but 
for the accidental trial of his stupendous powers. He was 
about fifteen hands and one inch high. His shoulders were 
very low, oblique, and so thick above, that, according to the 
observation of the time, a firkin of butter might have rested 
upon them. He stood very high behind, a conformation 
suited to his great power of progression. He was so thick- 
winded as to be heard blowing at a considerable distance. 
In the language of honest John Lawrence, “ he puffed and 
blowed like an otter, and galloped as wide as a barn-door.” 
No sooner were his powers exhibited on the turf, than every 
eye was set to scrutinize his form, and he was then admitted 
to possess in perfection the external characters indicative 
of great speed. A volume was written on his proportions 
by M. Saintbel, a veterinary surgeon, whose investigation 
\ shewed that his figure differed greatly from the conventional 
| form which speculative writers had assigned as the standard 
‘of perfection. He was of an indomitable temper, and his 
jockeys found it in vain to attempt to hold him, but con- 
tented themselves with remaining still on the saddle, while 
he swept along, his nose almost touching the ground. His 


9» 
= 


OE Oe ee 


THE RACE-HORSE. 529 


full speed was not determined, since he never met with an 
opponent sufficiently fleet to put it to the proof. He not | 
only was never beaten, but he was able to distance some of - 1 
the best horses of his time; and the fleetest could not keep | , i 
by his side for 50 yards together. | . y 
This remarkable horse first appeared on the turf, at the i 
age of five, in 1769. In the first heat, he set off of his own iW 
accord, and easily gained the race, his rider pulling him in aa { 
j vain with all his force for the last mile. O'Kelly observing ) i 
. this, and aware of his horse’s powers, offered, in the second | 
_ heat, “to place the horses,” and he took heavy bets that he — 
did so. When called upon to declare, he said, «“ Fclipse _ 
first, and the rest no place.” He gained his wagers: Eclipse _ i 
was first, and all the others were distanced, or, in the lan- 
guage of the turf, had no place. From this time Eclipse 
was continually on the turf, and gained every race. No . 
horse daring to contend with him, he closed his career of iW 
Seventeen months by walking over the Newmarket Course iid 
for the King’s Plate, in October 1770. During this brief | iG 
period, it is said that he gained L.25,000 for his owner. He - y 

was then employed with prodigious profit as a stallion. He oO 

~ got 334 winners at our numerous race-courses, who are com- . 
puted to have gained about L.160,000 to their owners, be- dig 
sides cups and plates. He died in 1789, at the age of twenty-~ : i 

five. 

f ’ Eclipse, it will be seen, was directly descended from the 
e \ Darley Arabian, and, besides, united in himself the best blood 
‘of the turf. It has been proposed to distinguish the line 
which he adorned as the Eclipse line of horses, just as that 
in which Herod is found has been designated the Herod line. 
Another horse of foreign lineage, scarcely inferior to the | 
Darley Arabian in the fame and value of his descendants, 
and by many supposed to have exercised a yet more im- 
portant influence on the horses of the turf, is the Godolphin 
Barb, who lived a short time later than the Darley Arabian, i 
having been born about the year 1724. This splendid horse { 
2 L 


By el 


530 THE HORSE, 


was long regarded as an Arabian, although his characters 
approached to those of the Barb. He was found dragging « 
water-cart in France, and was probably one of those neglected 
presents of horses, frequent at that time, from the Barbary 
Powers to the French Court. He was brought to England, 
and finally presented to Lord Godolphin, in whose stud he 
remained a considerable time before his value was suspected ; 
and then only it was diseovered in consequence of the ex- 
cellence of one of his sons, Lath, out of Roxana, who proved 
to be the fleetest horse, Childers excepted, that had, till then, 
appeared on the English turf. His grandson Matchem, was 
in a peculiar degree noted for the excellence of his stock. 
This latter horse is supposed to have yielded his owner, Mr 
Fenwick, upwards of L.17,000 as a stallion alone. He died 
in 1781, having had 354 sons and daughters, all winners at 
our numerous race-courses, and computed to have gained to 
their owners L.151,097. From the importance of the progeny 
of Matchem, it has been proposed to term the line to which 
he belongs the Matchem line. 

_/” As the greater part of the horses of the modern turf are 
/ more or less allied in blood to Herod, Eclipse, and Matchem, 
it has been proposed to classify them by their lineal descent 
from these celebrated horses. This classification cannot be 
deemed satisfactory, from the mixture of blood that has taken 


place ; but yet it is convenient, and may be found useful.* 


* The following Table will suffice to give some idea of the mixture of blood 
that prevails in the modern Race-Horse. Thus, it will be observed, that though 
the sire and dam of Bay Middleton are both in the Herod line, they yet partake 
more or less of the blood of both the Matchem and Eclipse lines. In the same 
way, Charles the Twelfth, though lineally descended from Eclipse, partakes of 
three successive infusions of the Herod blood; and Dr Syntax, though belong- 
ing to the Matchem line, inherits also the blood of both Herod and Eclipse. 
The same remark, indeed, applies even to Herod, Matchem, and Eclipse them- 
selves ; for, on referring to the Table, it will be seen that they all possessed 
more or less of the blood of one another. The Table will be readily understood 
when read thus: The Byerly Turk, and a mare descended through her sire 
from the D’Arcy Yellow Turk, produced Jigg: Jigg, and a mare descended 
through her sire from Curwen’s Bay Barb, produced Partner ; and so on :— 

BAY 


eeyxee 


THE RACE-HORSE. 531 


The record of the pedigree of the horses of the English 
Ae _ ‘'Lurf exhibits distinctly the formation of a race of horses of 


BAY MIDDLETON. 


Sire—SuL¥an. Dam—CoBWeEB, 


Marz descended through 


Mare descended through 
her Sire from i 


Honse, ° her Sire from 


Horses, 


| Byerly Turk D’Arcy Yellow Turk Byerly Turk D’Arcy Yellow Turk 


Jigg Curwen’s Bay Barb | Jigg Curwen’s Bay Barb 
Partner White D’Arcy Turk Partner White D’Arcy Turk 
Tartar Darley Arabian Tartar | Darley Arabian 
Herod Godolphin Barb Herod Godolphin Barb 
‘Woodpecker Matchem Highflyer Darley Arabian 
Buzzard Eclipse Sir Peter Eclipse 

Selim | Herod Walton Eclipse 

Phantom Matchem’ 
SULTAN. 
CoBweEB. 


CHARLES THE TWELFTH. 


Sire—Vo.Lraire£. Dam—-W acrTary. 


RE ea 5 a ee 
Darley Arabian D’Arcy Yellow Turk | Darley Arabian D’Arcy Yellow Turk 
Bartlett’s Childers | Lister Turk Bartlett’s Childers | Lister Turk 
Squirt -Hutton’s Bay Turk | Squirt Hutton’s Bay Turk 
Marske Godolphin Barb Marske Godolphin Barb 
Eclipse Alcock’s Arabian Eclipse Holderness Turk 
King Fergus Herod Don Quixote Herod ‘ 
Hambletonian . Herod Sancho Herod 

| Whitelock Eclipse. Prime Minister Eclipse 
Blacklock Herod 
: WAGTAIL. 
VOLTAIRE, 


DOCTOR SYNTAX. 


Sire—Pavnaror, Dam—BENINGPROUGH Marx. 
Rte 2 a ded thto 
Honss, SP siies arene Honss, piaba iereentad tone 
Godolphin Barb| St Victor’s Barb Darley ‘Arabian D’Arcy Yellow Turk 
Cade Partner, or Byerly Turk | Bartlett’s Childers | Lister Turk 
Matchem Darley Arabian Squirt Hutton’s Bay Turk 
Conductor Partner, or Byerly Turk | Marske Godolphin Barb 
Trumpator Alcock’s Arabian Eclipse Alcock’s Arabian 
; King Fergus Herod 
PAYNATOR. Beningbrough Godolphin Barb 


BENINGBROUGH MARE. 


SNe AE Ee 


532 THE HORS#. 


| exclusive lineage, or at least of a lineage interrupted only by 
the further infusion of the blood of those races of other 
countries from which its own characters have been derived. 
The record is of great interest and value, not only with re- 
spect to the matters of the Course, but as it relates to the 
physiological history of the Horse, and the principles of 
, breeding. It proves, in a manner which no similar docu- 


| ment has done, the constancy of the law by which the pro- 
} perties of conformation and character are transmitted from 
one animal to another, even to their remoter descendants. 
"It shews, beyond dispute, that the change produced on the 
properties and figure of the ancient horses of this country 
has been the result of the mixture of the blood of the horses 
of the warmer countries, and explains the meaning of the 
terms so often used, but so ill defined, of “ blood,” and 
“ thoroughbred.” For the most part, the horses of this 
privileged class have, since the more regular institution of 
the turf, been kept wonderfully free from intermixture with 
those of inferior breeding. Frauds have doubtless been 
' committed, and horses introduced into the racing lists with 
false pedigrees ; but, in general, an extreme vigilance has 
been exercised in this matter by those whose attention is 
constantly directed to the subject ; and it may be safely said 
that, for the last century and more, the instances of this 
kind have neither been numerous nor important in their re- 
sults. It has rarely happened that the inferiority of the 
spurious breed has not been rendered manifest by deficiency 
in the speed and other properties of the individuals or their 
descendants ; and though a few of doubtful origin may have 
been introduced into the Course, one of two effects has gene- 
, rally resulted: either the animals have been of themselves 
so good that no injury has resulted to the gerferal race from 
| the supposed taint, or they have been so inferior in character 
and value, that the blood has not been extended. In the 
last age, a very famous horse called Sampson, the property 
of the Marquis of Rockingham, was supposed to present such 


_ 


6 


* 


THE RACE-HORSE. 533 


a deviation from the ordinary type of the Race-Horse, that a 
very general opinion long prevailed on the turf that he was 
of impure pedigree. He was a horse of immense size and 
strength, was born in 1745, and died in 1777, at the age of 
32. When he first appeared for trial on the turf, nothing 
could exceed the ridicule of the jockeys at an attempt to run 
a coach-horse, as he was called. Sampson, however, turned 


out a racer of amazing power, and beat most of the horses 


of the day with which he entered into contest. The pre- f 
vailing opinion of modern breeders is, that Sampson was |. 
really of pure blood, and that his peculiarity of form was a/ 
variety. . 

The records of recognised authority with respect to the 
pedigree of Turf-horses, are the Stud-Book and Racing 
Calendars. These works afford every detail required re- 
garding the horses recognised as thoroughbred. It will 
be seen that, while the pedigree of the dam is carefully re- 
corded, descents are reckoned by the male. The Arabs, 
it has been said, adopt a different practice, and reckon 
descents by the female. Either usage is founded on the 
assumption that the virtues of the parents are reproduced in 
the progeny. The English breeders adopt the most natural 


_ course, that of reckoning by the parent whose influence is 


the most extensive with regard to the numbers to which he 
communicates his qualities. The practices are not essen- 
tially different in the result; for a male possessing certain 


properties derives them, on the assumption of the regularity 


of our law, from a male that has possessed the same virtues. 
The establishment of a true system of genealogy, it is appa- 
rent, must be founded on the derivation of both parents. 
The Race-Horse, cultivated for a peculiar purpose, pre- 
sents the conformation of parts which adapts him to the ends 
proposed. His height is from fifteen to sixteen hands. A 


‘medium, or even a smaller size, is preferred to one exceed- 


ing the usual standard. Few very tall racers have been re- 
markable for their performances on the turf, while many of 


a 


SST 


SERIES 


a 


Tas 


PaO Sree ES = ¥ ypeccmalt 


aa 


en, 


eS 


| 
be 
, 
| 
i 
i 


oe ee 


a vw « re 
ea ae cael 


— ES oT ST 
——- . Cae ks. —_ ~ ae = 
owas 


534 THE HORSE. 


the smaller size have proved themselves the most trustwor- 
thy and valuable. He is somewhat light in the body; and 
the limbs, with relation to the trunk, are somewhat longer _ 
than in the horses suited for the endurance of fatigue, or the 
exertion of physical force, as the Hunter, the Hackney, the 
Cart-Horse ; in which respects the Race-Horse approaches 
nearer to the African than the Asiatic type. The chest is 
deep, but narrow—a conformation suited to the exertion of 
speed. The shoulder is finely formed, and oblique, but gene- 
rally more low than consists with the safe and powerful 
action of the fore extremities. The back is somewhat long, 
and the distance between the last rib and the pelvis greater 
than in the hunter, in which strength and the power of en- 
durance are more regarded. The croup is long, the breadth 
and length of the hind-quarters are large, and the muscles are 
well developed. In these latter points, connected in the first 
degree with the power of progression, the Race-Horse sur- 
passes all other known breeds. The head is fine and mode- 
rately small, the forehead broad; the eyes are large and 
brilliant, the ears delicate, the lips thin, the nostrils wide, 
the subcutaneous veins apparent. The neck is somewhat 
long, straight, and thin, and the windpipe appears distinct. 
The limbs are muscular to the knee and hock, and below 
these joints, tendonous, thin, and flat. The pasterns are 
long and oblique, and the hoof is well formed. The whole 
conformation of the animal indicates lightness, activity, 
and the power of rapid motion. To these properties, in- 
deed, others have been sacrificed, indicative of strength, 
safe action, and the power of endurance. A painter or a 
seulptor, were he to choose the model of a beautiful horse, 
would not select the thoroughbred Horse: he would prefer 
the Turk, with his nobler carriage, or the Hunter, with his 
broader chest, his shorter back, his more elevated crest and 
withers ; but knowing the uses to which the Race-Horse is 
destined, we are reconciled to the peculiarities of his form, 
and even associate them{with ideas of beauty and harmony 


- 


} 


THE RACE-HORSE. Dow 


of parts. The prevailing colour of the modern Race-Horse 
is the bright brown or bay, so generally characteristic of the 
Horses of the Hast, with black legs, mane, and tail. A rich 
chestnut, too, the colour of Eclipse, is not unfrequent. The 
bright black, common to the larger horses of the plains of 
Germany, is rare, although good horses, chiefly those of the 
Trumpator blood, have been of this colour. Gray sometimes 
presents itself; but dun, roan, and piebald, are unusual. 

As the conformation of the Race-Horse has become adapt- 
ed to the exercise of a peculiar class of powers, so his treat- 
ment, food, and discipline, have relation to the same end. 
From an early period of his life, he is placed in what may be 
termed an artificial condition with respect to temperature, 
nourishment, and exercise. He is scarcely separated -from 
the dam before he is clothed, placed in a hot stable, put on a 
diet of dry food, and exercised according to rules. He is 
brought upon the turf at the age of three years, or sooner. 
According to a modern practice unhappily introduced, he is 
frequently run at the age of two years, or even before. This 
system is calculated to produce an injurious effect on this 
noble race of horses. It deprives the animals of that food 
which is best suited to the system in early life, substitutes 


artificial discipline for that natural exercise which the young” 


and immature animal requires, and tasks his powers to the 
extreme, before his natural growth has been completed. It 
impairs by over-excitement the vigour of the system, pro- 
duces a tendency to many maladies, and shortens the dura- 
tion of life. Not only does it affect the individual, but it 
acts upon the progeny, causing feebleness and disease, and 
impairing the natural powers of the race. 

The principle of the treatment of the modern Race-Horse, 
which is to be brought to a forced maturity of muscle and 
bone, is to keep him in what is termed condition, allowing 
him only a period of relaxation after the labour of the sea- 
son. He receives dry and nourishing food, is kept in a high 
temperature by the heat of the stable and continued clothing, 


POT IT TRON PRR ReReN— Ee ATE RTS RAE ARR 


a 


536 THE HORSE. 


and is rarely exposed to the atmosphere uncovered. Under 
this system the fatty secretion is interrupted, the organs of 
respiration are kept in a state of constant activity, and the 
muscular fibre acquires that tenseness which fits the animal 
for the severest exercise of his physical powers. What the 
heat of the climate and the aridity of the soil produce in the 
case of the Horses of the Desert, artificial treatment effects 
in the case of the Race-Horses of England, though with vio- 
lence to the general system. The first training or breaking 


in of these Horses is of the simplest kind, and has reference 
to nothing beyond the exercise of the animals’ powers on the 
turf. None of that careful discipline and progressive instruc- 
tion which are required in the case of the Saddle-Horse is 
needed for an animal which has never to exercise his speed 
but for a short distance, and on a level surface. In the case 
of these animals, we do not require to give an artificial car- 


riage, for the purpose of rendering them docile and pleasant 
to the rider, but we seek to preserve their natural paces, and 
to call forth to the utmost the exertion of their muscular 
powers in running. No discipline is required by which the 
centre of gravity shall be thrown back, the horse brought 
upon its haunches, and a higher and safer action given to the 
fore extremities. It suffices that he clears the turf on which 
he is exercised ; and the weight of his body is to be thrown 
forward, and not backward. He is therefore ridden by light 
boys, whose weight does not require him to bear on his pos- 
terior limbs, and who give him his daily exercise on a turf 
Similar to that on which his powers are to be called forth. 
His walk is the long stride proper to the uninstructed colt ; 
and the only other paces required of him are the natural 
canter and gallop. In these motions he is continually exer- 
cised; and if he answer the rein to the degree of allowing 
himself to be pulled up, and turned at the post, little more 
in the way of instruction is required of him. He is from 
time to time exercised in trials at running with his fellows, 
and thus acquires the habits of exertion suited to the race- 


THE RACE-HORSE. ae 


course. This species of training, it will be seen, has relation 


only to a given end, and will be inapplicable to any other. 
The horses thus educated are frequently unsuited to useful 
purposes: they are so unsafe that they can scarcely be trust- 
ed to ride over a rough surface ; and great numbers of them 
break down on the level turf on which they are exercised. 
Numbers of them are so little obedient to the rein, that even 
in the race they must be ridden with running martingales, 
though, by this means, their necks and heads are placed in 
a position unfavourable to speed. 

The more immediate training for the Course consists of a 
repetition and extension of the same system of treatment, 
with the addition of physic and forced perspiration. The 
horses being fed, are taken out early in the morning for se- 
veral hours, and again for several hours in the afternoon. 
They are mounted in the stable by the boys, and one taking 
the lead, the others follow to the training-ground, which is 
usually in the immediate vicinity of the stables. ‘The pace 
of the animals is gradually extended, until it becomes what 
is termed a brushing gallop. They are occasionally tried at 
speed with their fellows ; and the period_and degree of ex- 


ercise are suited to the temperament and age of the animals, ; 


as determined by the judgment of the training-groom. The 
effect. of this continued and severe discipline is to brace the 
muscular fibre, to maintain the strength and activity of the 
body, and to keep the respiratory organs in active play. To 
prevent the undue secretion of fat, purgative medicines are 
administered more frequently than in the case of any other 
class of horses; and the animals are occasionally subjected 
- to a severe Sweating, which is produced by clothing them 
thickly from head to tail, and galloping them for a shorter or 
longer space. When all the pores of the skin are opened by 
this exercise, the horses are taken to an adjoining house, and 
then scraped and rubbed tilldry. These sweats are repeated 
once a-week, or thrice in the fortnight, according to the con- 
dition and constitution of the horse. The effect of the train- 


a 


538 THE HORSE. 


ing is visible to the eye, in the distincter marking of the ex- 


ternal muscles and tendons, the prominence of the subcuta- 
neous bloodvessels, and the force, lightness, and celerity’ of 
the movements of the limbs and body. But a treatment thus 
artificial, carried to the degree required, must necessarily 
react upon the system, excite to excess the circulatory organs, 
enfeeble the powers of digestion, and induce many maladies. 
These horses, accordingly, arrive at premature age, are rarely 
long-lived, and are subject to numerous diseases of the limbs 
and viscera ; and great numbers of them break down after 
their first exercises on the turf, or sink under the preliminary 
trials. 

The practice of the Course itself merits consideration, not 
merely as a gay and exciting spectacle, affording relaxation 
and delight to great numbers of people, but as a system of 
games affecting public taste, national manners, and private 
morals,—as putting to the hazard of chances an enormous 
amount of capital,—and as being connected with the preser- 
vation of a beautiful race of horses, especially destined for 
the sport. 

The number of. established race-courses of the British 
Islands amounts at present to 153 ; namely, 182 in England, 
9 in Wales, 9 in Scotland, and 3 in Ireland. The value of 
the stakes and prizes run for amounts to L.148,775,* forming, 
however, a mere fraction of the vast sums dependent on bet- 
ting. The number of Royal Plates is 50, now commuted into 
payments of 100 guineas each, defrayed partly from the 
Privy Purse, partly from the department of the Master of 
the Horse, and partly from an annual Parliamentary grant. 

Of the English race-courses, that of Newmarket is the first 
in rank and early celebrity. The town itself stands partly 
in Cambridgeshire and partly in Suffolk, 61 miles NNE. from 
London, on the great road leading to Norwich. King James I. 
built a house here, that he might enjoy the recreation of 


* History of the Turf, by James Christie Whyte, Esq. 


THE RACE-HORSE. 589 


the chase, and Charles II. added to and repaired it, after it 
had fallen into decay during the Civil Wars, frequently grac- 
ing it with his presence during the races on the adjoining 
Heath. The original palace of James has long been sold 
and applied to other uses. The structure erected by Charles 
is chiefly used for training-stables. Mansions in and around 
the elegant little town are the memorials of success on the 
turf. Club-rooms, coffee-houses, billiard-tables, and circu- 
lating libraries, afford relief from the ennui of the intervals of 
business. They very air seems tainted with the spirit of the 
place; and, from the Three Tuns to the aristocratic rooms 
of the Jockey Club, all is redolent of betting and play. The 
very boys of the place, we are told, consume their winter 
evenings in cock-fighting and dog-matches, and at halfpenny 
roulette tables stake their all as freely as their betters. The 
racing-ground is reckoned the finest in England, from the 
variety of its surface, and the dryness, softness, and elasticity 
of the turf, It is in the vicinity of the town, is four miles in 
length, and is vested in the Jockey Club, as holding it under 
the Duke of Portland. - The training-grounds, a mile and a 
half in length, are equally suited to their purpose. Four 
hundred horses are frequently to be seen in training during 
the greater part of the year; and the spectacle of so many 
fine creatures at their daily exercise on the heath is scarce 
inferior in curiosity and interest to that of the final exercise 
of their powers. The racing-ground is in eighteen divisions, 
termed Courses, of which the longest is the Beacon Course, 
4 miles 1 furlong 138 yards: the next, the Round Course, 
3 m. 4 f. 187 yds.: the last division of the Beacon Course is 
3 m. 45 yds.: the middle portion of the same course 2 m. 
97 yds.; and so on to the Yearling Course, 2 f. 147 yds. 
The variety of these courses, some on the rise, some on the 
descent, and some flat, afford means of selecting ground for 
~ matches suited to the age, strength, and qualities of the 
horses. The chair of the Judge is on wheels, moveable from 
place to place. The duty of the Judge is to declare the 


ah 7 ll gh aging Fo 


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a er 


tet eta 


ae geet i gt 


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540 THE HORSE. 


winner, which he does by the colour worn by the rider, which 
is handed to him before starting. He does not, as in other 
places, superintend the weighing of the jockeys, or take any 
cognizance of them in the race; and he rarely even sees the 
horses till they come upon the course. Betting-posts are 
placed at suitable places, to which the sportsmen resort after 
each race, to make their bets for the following one; and the 
process of offering, taking, and booking bets, is performed 
with a quickness, regularity, aud decision, which cannot be 
surpassed. As only half an hour elapses between each race, 
the interest and excitement of the scene never flag. By the 
time of starting, the eager crowd that had surrounded the 
_ betting-post disperse, as if by a common impulse, some gal- 
loping to the starting-post, some placing themselves where 
the ultimate struggle of the horses is expected to take place, 
and some surrounding the Judge’s chair, where they can 
soonest learn the momentous issue. All has an air of busi- 
ness, which no other course in the kingdom presents. No 
noisy crowds, as at the more popular meetings, fill the space, 
and distract the attention by clamour. Rarely the number 
of spectators exceeds 500 or 600, the majority of them on 
horseback, and deeply engaged in the business of the day. 
In the following morning all the bets are paid, when more 
than L.50,000 may change hands in an hour. The meetings at 
Newmarket are seven in the year :—frst, the Craven Meet- 
ing, So named in compliment to Lord Craven, commencing 
on Easter Monday ; and then, at intervals of a fortnight, the 
First and Second Spring Meetings; then the J uly Meeting ; 
then three in October, the last of which, termed the Hough- 
ton, is more numerously attended than any of the others. 
Next in rank to Newmarket for its races is Epsom, situ- 
ated about fifteen miles south-west from London, on the 
verge of the Banstead Downs. Upon the open Space formerly 
stood an ale-house, called the Oaks, which was purchased by 
General Burgoyne, and fitted up for a hunting-seat. It was 
sold to the Karl of Derby, one of the most perfect sportsmen of 


THE RACE-HORSE. © 541 


his day, who enlarged the mansion-house, and beautified the 
domain. In 1779 he established the Oak Stakes, so named from 
his seat, and in the following year the Derby,—both of which 
have been run for ever since, forming the most popular races in 
the kingdom. The racing-ground is on the Downs. The new 


course, termed the Derby, is a mile and a half, somewhat in 


the form of a horse-shoe; the first three-quarters of a mile 
are nearly straight, the next quarter of a mile forms a gradual 
bend, corresponding with that of the shoe, and the last half 
mile is straight. The first part of the course, for about half 
a mile, is an ascent; the next third of a mile is level; the 
remainder is on the descent, until within the distance, when 


the ground rises again to the winning-post. The subdivision 


courses are, the new Two-year-old Course, T. Y. C., of six fur- 
longs; the old T. Y. C., of somewhat less than four ; and the 
Craven Course, one mile and a quarter. The Great Stand, 
erected in 1830, is capable of containing between seven and 
eight thousand persons; and various minor stands line the 
course to a distance, while innumerable temporary ones are 
erected during the period of the race. The first spring 
meeting, of minor interest, takes place in April; the great 
meeting, at which the Derby, the Oaks, the Craven, and 
other stakes are run for, commences on the Tuesday, and 
continues until the end of the week preceding Whitsuntide. 
The Derby is run for on Wednesday, the Oaks on Friday. 
The Derby stakes, for a mile and a half, are fifty sovereigns 
each, for three-year-old colts carrying 8st. 7Ib., and for 
fillies carrying 8 st. 21b. The Oaks offer the same condi- 
tions for fillies carrying 8 st.4 1b. These races excite intense 


interest; and the winning of the Oaks or Derby is an object: 


of the first ambition to all connected with the English Turf. 
These popular races present, it may be believed, an ap- 
pearance very different from that of the quiet order and 
business-like arrangements of Newmarket. Here we are in 
contact with a vast city, pouring forth its countless multi- 
tudes to enjoy a Spectacle. The scene is unequalled in its 


GR ngs ttrerdeninn- 


Ci ae ba hy abe mtn nen pri ny mil pathol 


~ 2 SR I rE. ph RR ot Re PEA A RB 


542 THE HORSE, 


kind in the world. All the approaches far around exhibit a 
moving mass of horsemen, carriages, and pedestrians, hurry- 
ing to the spot, while all the grounds which can command 
the course are filled with spectators. Nothing appears to 
the eye except the excitement and delight of eager crowds; 
but when we mark the start, on which the fortunes of hun- 
dreds hang, with half a million perhaps depending on the 
result, to be decided in a few brief anxious minutes, then 
we feel that there is something in the drama to be played 
that must agitate many a heart. The whole spectacle is of 
deep curiosity and interest, and to be in any degree appre- 
ciated must be beheld. 

The races of Ascot Heath, in the county of Berks, take 
place in the end of May, closely following those of Epsom, 
and they last for several days. These races were established 
by the Duke of Cumberland. They are largely attended by 
the more opulent classes of the Capital and neighbouring 
country. They last for several days, and deep betting takes 
place. The favour of the Court has been especially shewn to 
these meetings ; and, from the rank and wealth of their sup- 
porters, it is usual to regard them as more the races of aris- 
tocracy and fashion than any other in the kingdom. 

The Goodwood races, so named from the noble mansion of 
the Duke of Richmond, near Chichester in Sussex, although 
amongst the most recently established, are now the most 
popular in the south of England. From the fineness of the 
course, the excellence of the regulations, and the value and 
variety of the prizes, the best horses of Newmarket are 
brought to this course. The meeting takes place in the end 
of July, and lasts four days. 

The races of York, instituted in the reign of Queen Anne, 
and taking place in a district the most famous of any in Eng- 
land for the rearing of Horses, are well supported, and the 
money run for in Plates and Stakes is very large. The 
course is perfectly flat: the meetings are three in the year, 
namely, in April, August, and October. 


— 


THE RACH-HORSE. 543 


But of all the meetings in the north of England, that of 
Doncaster has occupied the most prominent place, on account 
of the institution of the St Leger stakes, which had their 
origin in the year 1776. The commencement of this cele- 
brated race was a sweepstakes of twenty-five guineas each 
for three-year-old colts carrying 8 st., and for fillies carrying 
7 st. 12 lb. for a two-mile heat. There were six subscribers, 
and the stake was won by a bay filly by Sampson, belonging 


to the Marquis of Rockingham, who beat Colonel St Leger’s 


bay filly and the other horses. In the following year it was 
suggested by Colonel St Leger that the sweepstakes should 
be continued annually on the same conditions ; and the race 
was accordingly named the St Leger, in compliment to the 
proposer of it. The original conditions were continued until 
the year 1832, when the stakes were altered to fifty sovereigns 
for each subscriber, with one-half forfeit ; the weights being, 
for colts, 8 st. 6 lb., and for fillies 8 st. 3lb.; and the owner 
of the second horse receiving one hundred sovereigns out of 
the stakes. The Doncaster race-course is round, and nearly 
on a dead level. The Four-mile Course, so called, twice 
round is 38m. 7 f. 219 yds. ; the Cup Course is 2m. 5f.; the 
Two-mile Course is 2,m. 52 yds.; the St Leger, 1 m. 6 f. 
132 yds ; the Fitzwilliam Course, 1m. 4 f. 10 yds. ; the Two- 


_ year-old Course, 7 f. 189 yds.; the Red-house is 5 f. 164 yds.* 


These courses are adapted to the various stakes and matches, 
which are numerous at these races. The meetings are held 
annually in September, a fortnight previous to the first New- 
market meeting in October ; on which occasion a vast con- 
course of individuals interested in the turf assembles from all 
parts of the kingdom, and heavy betting takes place. 

In like manner, the other race-courses of the kingdom 


might be referred to, all of them exciting intense interest - 


throughout large districts of country, collecting for a time 
great crowds as to a common centre of occupation and 


* Whyte’s History of the Turf. 


8. 


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544 THE HORSE. 


amusement, and involving the hazard of incredible sums of 
money. ‘Those of Bath, Chester, Liverpool, Harwich, Man- 
chester, Wolverhampton, are familiar by name to most per- 
sons in this country. That of the Curragh of Kildare in Ire- 
land is at the little town of Kildare, on the great road lead- 
ing from Dublin to Limerick. The ground on which the races 
are held is a noble undulating down, six miles in length by 
two in breadth, which, for all the requisites of running and 
training, is deemed superior to Newmarket itself. There 
are five meetings within the year at the Curragh, at which 
many fine horses run, where a large crowd of all kinds of 
persons collects, and where much dangerous betting takes 
place. 

The horses, it has been seen, which are capable of. en- 
gaging in these contests, are a peculiar variety, whose cha- 
racters have been acquired by a mixture of the blood of the 
| lighter horses of other countries with that of the pre-existing 
| race, and then by continued breeding between the individuals 
_ of the mixed lineage. The variety thus formed has become 
(@ caste, whose comparative freedom from intermixture is 
ensured by its superiority for the purposes to which it is 
destined over the races of inferior breeding. But the latter, 
although they cannot engage on equal terms with the swifter 
breed, may do so with one another. Hence races have been 
established for horses that are not thoroughbred. To this 
class of half-bred horses has been applied the absurd term 
Cocktails. The races for half-bred horses have now become 
very common at the different race-courses of the kingdom, 
with the exception of Newmarket, where their introduction 
has been always resisted. This kind of race has never been 
regarded with much favour by sportsmen. Objections to it are, 
the frauds to which it gives rise, and the disputes of which 
itis productive. It is very difficult to prove that a horse is 
thoroughbred, if the owner chooses to conceal or falsify the 
pedigree. Hence thoroughbred horses may be fraudulently 
introduced into this class of races. The consequence is, that 


10 


# dys 


THE RACE-HORSE. 545 


the prize is almost certainly carried away from the horses 


which alone are entitled to run. The fraud is difficult to be 


prevented, in consequence of the large amount of stakes of 


_ this kind established at the provincial meetings, which hold 


out a strong temptation to deception on the part of the lower 
class of persons connected with the turf. Some years ago, a 
horse described as half-bred, under the fictitious name of 
Tom Paine, was hawked about the countr , and won many 


valuable stakes. On investigation, it was found that this . 


pretended Tom Paine was Tybalt, a thoroughbred horse by 
Thunderbolt, from a mare of Lord Grosvener’s, Meteora, 
one of the best in England of her day; and similar, though 
less impudent, frauds have in other cases taken place. Half- 
bred horses, too, are suited for different and more useful 
purposes than racing, and they are, for the most part, ruined 


by the severe training necessary to put them into a condi-_ 


tion for running; and, when a number of half-bred horses 
contend together, it can scarcely happen that all will be put 
upon an equal footing with respect to training, so that, in 
this respect, a practical inequality is introduced, independent 
of the merits of the horses. It may seem that stakes limited 
to hunters, which have been regularly hunted for the season, 
are more free from objection. It is to be observed, however, 
that a hunter is destined for a particular class of services, 
for which mere Speed is not the most important requisite ; 
and it is cruel to put a hunter, after the hard services of the 
season, under the severe discipline necessary to fit him for 
running. Besides, many hunters are now thoroughbred, 
and this is a source of inequality, independent of the real 
value of the animals as adapted to the chase. For these 
reasons, it appears to many that this class of stakes ought 
to receive no encouragement on the regular turf; and fur- 
ther, that yeomanry races, farmers’ races, and the like, should 
all be proscribed. No good, with respect to the improve- 
ment of the breed of these kinds of horses, can result from 
this class of races. A race-horse is intended to exert the 


2M 


ee 
oN PR NE FEN RCRLARRSeR Tt ARN TORTS MRT 


i ee 


546 THE HORSE. 


powers of speed, and that is the best race-horse which most 
excels in this quality. But is this the property sought for 
in a hunter or in a road-horse? Or is a race on a level turf 
the fitting mean to prove that either is a good hunter or a 
good roadster? What should we think of a race of dray- 
horses ? 
/~ Sometimes, though very rarely, half-bred horses are brought 
/ upon the regular course; but their inferiority is always ba- 
anced by a large discount in their favour of the weight 
' borne. Arabs and other Eastern horses likewise have some- 
times been run, but with scarce a chance of success against 
the thoroughbred horses of the country: Only one Eastern 
‘ horse, it is believed, ever acquired any moderate reputation 
on the turf. A race was once established at Newmarket 


expressly for Arabs ; but the experiment failed, from the want 


of interest excited, in consequence of the inferior speed of 
the horses as compared with those of native breeding. Even 
the first descendant between the native and Eastern race is 
usually inferior.\\ By the regulations for the Goodwood Cup, 
the first descendants of Arabian, Turkish, or Persian horses, 
are allowed a discount of 181b. of weight; and, when both 
parents are of these countries, a discount of 361b. In other 
cases, English race-horses have been tried against the horses 
of other countries. They are frequently carried to India, and 
matched against the best Arabs of the country ; but the con- 
tests, it is believed, are almost always, under a parity of cir- 
cumstances, in favour of the English racer, although the 
heat of the climate appears to be eminently unsuited to the 
exertion of his powers. Sometimes accounts reach us, 
through the continental journals, of the same kind of trials, 
with a different result; but we do not learn in how far the 
conditions of weight, training, and the like, were such as to 
put the horses on a fair equality. In the year 1825, a race 
was run in Russia between two English thoroughbred horses, 
Sharper and Mina, and three Cossack horses, the latter se- 
lected, after numerous trials, from the best that could be 


THE RACE-HORSE. eee ° ! 


procured in the countries of the Don. The distance to be 
run exceeded forty-seven miles. On starting, the Cossacks 
took the lead, the English following about three or four 
lengths. They had not proceeded half a mile, before the 
Stirrup-leather of Sharper broke, and he ran off with his 


vider, followed by Mina. Before they could be brought up, 


they had run more than a mile, and up a hill. The race, 
however, continued, and half the distance was run in an hour 
and four minutes. At that time both the English horses 
seemed fresh, and one of the Cossacks. Mina fell lame, and 
was withdrawn. The remaining Cossacks began to flag, and 
Sharper soon likewise shewed symptoms of distress. The 


Russians and Cossacks, jealous of the honour of their coun-_ 


try’s horse, dragged him along by the bridle, threw. away 
the saddle, and mounted a child upon his back, nay, at length 
dragged him by a rope, and even endeavoured to support 
him by riding alongside of him. Sharper did the distance in 
two hours and forty-eight minutes, followed by the Cossack, 
who came in eight minutes later. In the accounts given of 
this extraordinary race, it is stated that the English horses 
carried at starting 3 st. more than their rivals ; while, during 
half the race, it has been seen the Cossack was ridden by a 
mere child. If these accounts be correct, it is evident that 
the Cossack horses were immeasurably beaten, even in that 
kind of race the most favourable for the trial of their pecu- 
liar powers. The accident to Sharper, and the distress oc- 
casioned him by running up a hill, were sufficient to have 
turned the day against him; but when to this is added the 
difference of weight, it is evident that the Cossack horses 
had not the remotest chance of success on equal terms. It 
would be interesting, however, to repeat this kind of trial, 
though for a less cruel distance, so as to determine, in a 
satisfactory manner, the relative powers of two races of 
horses both so excellent of their kind. 


A class of Races introduced into this country has found 


_ favour among certain persons, but with little of reason to 


ee — 
OT I IR eee AERP RMR =p AN ETE PR RAEI I 


Se a 


548 THE HORSE. 


defendthem. The Steeple-chase, or, as our ancestors termed 
it, the Wild-goose chase, is well calculated certainly to shew 
the fearlessness of the rider, but scarcely his humanity and 
judgment. At any time, the high leap is a severe tax on the 
muscular powers of the horse ; but when he is out of breath, 
and sinking under the exertion of severe riding, the forcing 
of him over an obstacle is injurious and cruel. The riding 
across a country is the regular exercise of a hunting field ; 
but in the Steeple-chase, it is the wanton abuse of the powers 
of a generous creature intrusted to our humanity. It is not 
justified by any end of utility ; any enjoyment beyond the 
barren applause for risking the safety of the rider and the 
life of his victim. "We say, then, let those unhappy exhibi- 
tions of fool-hardiness and cruelty be proscribed by public 
opinion, and abandoned by the youth of the country. 

The Rules and Conditions of Racing have been gradually 
reduced to a system, and recognised by common consent. 
The regulations of Newmarket have the highest authority, 
and are adhered to in their essential details at the other 
races. The race may consist of heats of one or more miles, 
in which the winner of the majority of heats becomes the 
victor ; or of matches, consisting of a single race, by which 
the contest is at once determined. The system of heats is 
adopted in the case of royal and other public plates and 
prizes ; the single race generally in the case of private and 
subscription matches or sweepstakes. But, as an addition 
to the weight carried makes an amazing difference to an 
animal moving at its utmost speed, the regulation of the 
weight is an essential element in the conditions of a race. 
‘When the animals are of the same sex and age, the weights 
should be the same, in order to shew their relative powers ; 
but, when animals of different age and sex contend together, 
they are put as nearly as possible in a state of equality by 
the difference of weight assigned to each. A larger weight 
is carried by stallions than by mares or geldings. The usual 
difference between a colt and filly of the same age is 3 or 4 Ib., 


| 


THE RACE-HORSE. : 549 


and the ordinary weight carried by a colt three years old is 
8 st. 6 or 7lb. The difference allowed for difference of age 
progressively diminishes as the animals become older, until 
it ceases. But, besides the difference of weight determined 
by age or sex, there are differences determined by conven- 


tion. Thus, parties having a match together determine by 


agreement, founded on their real or supposed knowledge of 
the powers of the respective horses, the weight which each 
shall carry. This is usually termed a handicap match. Some- 
times it is stipulated that horses which have gained stakes, 


as the Oaks or Derby, shall carry an additional weight ; _ 


while, on the other hand, horses whose advantages of breed- 
ing or otherwise have been inferior, are allowed a discount 
of weight in their favour. The differences of weight which 
different classes of horses shall carry, in order that they 
may be placed in a certain degree of equality, are plainly 
not reducible to any fixed practical rule, much less to any 
mathematical theorem founded on the relative powers of the 
horses under different conditions. The whole adjustment is 
one of convention, based on the practical observation of 
Sportsmen of the average power of horses, as exhibited in 
different cireumstances. When it is considered that an 
ounce of additional loading to the same horse may make the 
difference of a yard or more in half a mile of running, it will 
be seen how greatly the weight borne may affect the issue in 
the case of horses of equal powers. From mere experience, 


, without any application of principles, it is surprising how 


well those practised in the business of the turf are able to 
calculate the effects of weight on the chances of success. 
In a match which took place many years ago at Newcasile- 
under-Line, the horses were handicapped, having their re- 
spective weights assigned to them by an umpire. Sir Thomas 
Stanley’s Cedric, three years old, was to carry 6st. 13 lb. ; 
Mr Mytton’s Handel, four years old, 7 st. 11 lb.; Sir Wil- 
liam Wynne's Taragon, four years old, 8 st.; Sir John Eger- 
ton’s Astbury, four years old, 8 st.6 lb. For three succes- 
sive heats Taragon and Handel came in nose to nose, reeling 


EE ES STR STREETER ATS PRR a OPPRESSION RAPT ye eee 


550 THE HORSE. 


at the last, and ‘scarce able to carry their riders to the 
scales. In the first heat Astbury was third, but so near 
were all the horses that his place could with difficulty be 
determined. Lying by, however, after the first heat, he came 
forward in a final one, and won,* In the first dead heat 
it is apparent, the weight of a few grains might have turned 
the scale. 

By the former practice of the turf, the weights were heavy 
and the courses long. Up to the commencement of the pre- 
sent century, the weights for plate horses were from 10 st. 
4 1b. to 11 st. 6 lb., and the heats were of three or four miles. 
By modern practice, the length of heats is reduced to one or 
two miles, and the weight to about 83 stones. The weight 
does not include the shoes of the horse, which are therefore 
made of the slightest construction. The saddle usually 
weighs 3 or 4 lb., and sometimes it does not exceed 2 lb. 
When weight is to be carried, either the saddle is loaded 
with lead, or the weight is attached to the person of the 
jockey, which is conceived to distress the horse less than a 
stationary load. The jockey, with his appurtenances, is 
weighed before he starts, and again on coming in, he must 
proceed mounted to the place of weighing. If he dismounts 
before, or wants weight, he is held to have been distanced, 
unless he has been disabled by accident, in which case he 
may be led or carried to the scales. 

The balancing of thé horses’ powers by their weights being 
a necessary element in the race and in the calculations of 
success, it is important to the person who bets to have a good 
knowledge of the characters of the horses, of their age, and 
of their powers, as shewn by their running. But, besides 
the public manifestation of the horses’ powers on the course, 
it is not unfrequent to make private trials of the horses which 
are to run, which enables their owners to speculate more 
securely on the ultimate result. It is not deemed expedient 
to prevent this system, but an endeavour is made to lessen 


* Mr Apperly, Quarterly Review. 


a 


~ 


THE RACE-HORSE. 551 


as far as possible the hurtful effects which may result from 
it. One evil, scarcely to be guarded against, is the circula- 
tion of false reports of the trials, whereby horses which it is 
known beforehand will lose are rendered favourites for the 
great stakes. This has taken place in many cases to the de- 


_ deption of the public, and the injury of those to whom the 
-reports were communicated. The watching of trials is strictly 


prohibited, at least by the Newmarket regulations; but watch- 
ing notwithstanding takes place, and the result is communi- 
cated with the speed of a telegraph to the different clubs, and 
those who have the means to pay for the intelligence. But 


in this game of trick the watcher and his correspondents are 


often cheated in their turn. The training-grooms may make 
a horse win or lose as suits the purpose to be served; nay, 
the jockeys who ride may be as ignorant of the result as the 


horses themselves. The one jockey, we will suppose, has 


gained the race by a single length, or by half a dozen of 
lengths ; but he knows not the load of shot that has been 
privately stuffed into his rival’s saddle ; and the latter, good 
man, is equally ignorant of the leaden spell that has been 
laid upon the powers of his horse. But the story which of 
all others has been the most frequently told upon this sub- 
ject, and which best deserves to be repeated, relates to a 


‘famous match in the reign of George I. A horse, Merlin, was 


to run against another, the property of the well-known Tre- 


_ gonwell Frampton, then styled the Father of the Turf. The 


match excited intense interest among the sportsmen of the 
north in favour of Merlin, and among those of the south in 
favour of his rival. The horses had been for some time in 
training at Newmarket, when Frampton’s groom, with the 
knowledge of his master, endeavoured to induce the groom 
of Merlin to have a private trial with the weights and for 
the distances agreed upon, which he asserted could not fail 
to make both their fortunes. The groom in charge of Mer- 
lin had the honesty to communicate the proposal to Sir Wil- 
liam Strickland, who took the charge of the match for Mer- 


TR PTC PRE TURRET =r ERENT PH MTP 


SESE AIS SENN 


Speer ernie emianele 
enanteeseonaevelniasieonaeieaegee eee ES SH 


SSeS T TERRI HT 


Bo ee 


502 THE HORSE. 


lin. The Baronet coolly desired the groom to accept the 
offer, but, at the same time, privately instructed him to put 
7 lb. more of weight into his saddle than were to be used at 
the match. Frampton had previously given the very same 
orders to his groom, and the two horses started on their 
trial, each loaded with 7 Ib. beyond the weight which he was 
to carry. In the trial Merlin beat his antagonist by a length. 
This being duly communicated by the grooms to their respec- 
tive masters, each became certain of success. If my horse, 
argues the Baronet, can beat the other with 7 lb. extra weight, 
he is sure to win the race; if mine, says Frampton, can come 
in within a length, loaded with his extra 7 lb., his success in 
the race is certain. The patriarch communicated the mo- 
mentous secret to his friends, and numerous bets were offered 
and accepted on the result. At length the important hour 
arrived, and the betting was beyond all former example. 
The south country gentlemen, confident in the stratagem of 
their chief, declared that they would bet their gold while they 
had it, and then their land: the north country squires, equally . 
assured of the success of their plot, took the bets to any 
amount, The horses started, the jockeys did their duty, and, 
just as was to be expected, the race was gained by Merlin 
by the same distance as in the secret trial. The confusion 
was immense ; the secret came out; and the wily father of 
the Turf found, as many are said to have since done, that 
his opponent was too far north for him. Numbers of gentle- 
men were ruined by this event; and soon afterwards a law 
was passed for preventing the recovery of gaming debts be- 
yond the amount of L.10 sterling,—a foolish law, Seeking in 
vain to counteract the natural feelings of gentlemen, by re- 
lieving them of the obligation to pay their debts. Frampton, 
the party implicated in this affair, deserves notice. He was 
born in the reign of Charles II., and had been keeper of the 
Running horses at Newmarket to King William IIT., Queen 
Anne, and George I., as he continued to be to George II., in 
whose reign he died, at the age of eighty-six. He wasa man 


THE RACE-HORSE. , 553 


of birth and fortune, esteemed by his private friends; but he 
had the misfortune to be regarded by the world as the great- 
est rogue of his age. One act of his is recorded, so full of 
meanness, avarice, and cruelty, as to be incredible. We will 
not repeat it, because we say that the evidence which has 
been produced in support of it is not worth a straw; because 
the victim of the tale has lain a hundred years and more in 
his grave without a tongue to defend him; and because, ac- 
cordingly, every man who values for himself a good name 


after death is bound to pronounce a verdict of “not guilty” 


in favour of the unhappy Frampton. 

The means of judging of the success of rival horses on the 
turf unfortunately do not depend upon events which may be 
the subject of reasonable calculation, but on mere contingen- 
cies. A horse may be run to lose as well as to win, and 
other circumstances may affect the result, having as little 


relation to the powers and merits of the horses as events in 


the moon. But, before speaking of these things, it will be 
well to turn for a moment to the classes of persons who are 
engaged in this stupendous system of amusement and play. 

The humblest class connected with the business of the 
turf consists of the Boys of the Stables, to each of whom is 
assigned the care of one horse, with the duty of riding it at 
exercise: of these poor youths the number is very great. 
They enter on their hard duties at a period of life so early, 
that the stable becomes to them a little world, which bounds 
their thoughts, and influences all their habits. One of their 
number has given us a whole book, under a title eminently 
characteristic of the Stable, “ Genius Genuine.” Another, 
however, has really lived to distinguish himself as a man of 
letters, and has given us the singular story of a Stable-boy’s 
Life. This is Holeroft, known in his age as a dramatic writer 
and novelist of no mean note, 

The boys, he tells us, rige at half-past two in summer, and 
at between four and five in the depth of winter. When they 
begin to awaken one another for their morning task, the 


STR NS RIN NR RAL = RENTERS PTR ITE APNE 


Se es 


er revi treme ar EERSTE or 


554 THE HORSE. 


horses are on the watch, neigh, and express their joy. Food 
being supplied, the litter is shaken, the stalls are made 
comfortable, and the animals dressed. They are mounted 
in the stable, and taken out to the downs and heaths for 
exercise, which lasts for several hours. On their return 
they are again dressed, and the boys permitted to break 
their fast; and nothing, our author tells us, can exceed the 
enjoyment of a stable-boy’s breakfast. The duties of the 
stable are then resumed, and again the horses are taken to 
the training-grounds, and again subjected to their long exer- 
cise. These horses, hot in blood, tender from constant cloth- 
ing and rubbing, are skittish, often vicious, easily and sud- 
denly alarmed, irritable, and dangerous even in their play. 
The youthful horsemen acquire by degrees a firm seat, cling- 
ing to their fiery steed by their knees and legs, and manag- 
ing it with courage and address. Their seat has not the 
graceful ease of the manége, but accords with the practice 
found suitable for the Course. In the stable they acquire a 
wonderful command over the hot and dangerous creatures 
with which they are in contact, ordering them with authority, 
roughly rubbing their irritable skins and dangerous heels, i 
single stroke of which would terminate the joys and sorrows 
of the tiny groom. While often a man and a stranger durst 
no more enter the stall or loose box of one of these fiery 
creatures than the den of a tiger, these boys are to be seen 
as much at their ease as if they were playing with a cat; so 
strong is the power of reason, even in a child, over brute force 
and the wildest passions of inferior natures. 

In a community of such lads, far away from the vigilance 
of early friends, associated with evil minds, and witnesses of 
gross pursuits, an extreme severity of discipline is called for. 
— Woe it is to him, our author tells us, who is absent at stable 
hours ; but how many are the minor offences which lie be- 
tween this extreme and the mere thoughtlessness of boyhood, 
for which the harsh reproof, the ashen rod, the abrupt dis- 
missal, are put in force! The want of sleep may seal the 


THE RACH-HORSE. 5D) 


urchin’s eyes even when he approaches the brushing gallop ; 
how much more soundly is he likely to slumber upon the truss 
of straw in the warm stall! His dreams, however, may be 
interrupted by the ready broom, and more effective switch. 
“TI remember to have been so punished once,” says our 
author, describing his falling asleep in the horse’s stall, 
‘‘when the blow, I concluded, was given by Tom Watson, 
as I thought no other boy in the stable could have made so 
large a wale: it reached from the knee to the instep, and was 
of a finger’s breadth.’ Here the chastisement may have 
been wholesome; but to the forlorn boy, the more cruel 
dismissal may bring destitution, sorrow, and crime. Mr 
Holcroft describes his own mental sufferings in a case 
of this kind, the penalty of an unlucky tumble from a 
dark-gray filly, by which he nearly broke his neck. But 
for what further relates to our author’s personal adven- 
tures, reference must be made to his own amusing memoirs, 
where we find detailed his first feelings of joy on partaking 
of a breakfast of cold meat, Gloucester cheese, and white 
bread ; his exultation at finding himself, in place of driving a 
shoemaker’s donkey through the dirt, mounted on an animal 
outstripping the wind ; his fall from the dark-gray filly, and 
its results ; and the final ruin of all his equestrian hopes, by 
his being found “idling away his time in reading ;” by his 
scratching ciphers on the paling of the stable-yard with a 
nail; becoming actually able to spell a word of six syllables, 
to the surprise of his drunken schoolmaster; by his being 
found studying psalmody under the guidance of a journeyman 
leather-breeches maker ; and finally, by his throwing away 
all his earnings, by betting, like his betters, on the stirring 
events of the heath. While these things may make us smile, 


_ they may furnish food for graver thoughts. Can nothing be 


done to benefit the condition of these youthful instruments of 
so many pleasures? Of all the vast sums which are squan- 
dered on licentious sports, can no mite be saved to gain some 
little food of the mind for these severely-tasked boys, even to 


i | 


\ 


—— 


oes 


esa 


Se 


noe 


é 
a eR RTTEPIRINIT CE et RNR PRIN neo =m — , =i 


556 THE HORSE. 


the degree of teaching them to spell words of six syllables ? 
Can nothing be allotted for relief to them during the trying 
hours of destitution, when the failure of employment renders 
them helpless and heart-broken, even though their dismissal 
should have been merited, and for offences greater than fall- 
ing from a dark-gray filly, or singing psalms with a leather- 
breeches maker? We do not think they would make the 
worse grooms if some substitutes were provided for skittles, 
cock-fighting, and halfpenny-roulette tables. The prospects 
of this class, it is believed, are sufficiently melancholy. They 
soon outgrow the light weight which is necessary for the ha- 
bitual exercise,of the Race-Horse. Their highest ambition 
is to become jockeys; but, in ninety-nine cases out of a hun- 
dred, Nature refuses to limit their growing forms to the Lil- 
liputian standard of 8 st. ; and a few only accordingly attain 
the honours of jockeyship. 

The Jockeys, again, form a class of higher importance and 
rank ; the success of the race mainly depending on the skill, 
the coolness, and promptitude, with which they perform their 
part. The jockey must be of small size, to suit the light 
weight of the modern Turf, while he must possess the phy- 
sical strength of limbs and body required for his dangerous 
exercise. His seat on the saddle differs from that of the 
ordinary horseman: he supports himself on his stirrups, and 
by the pressure of his thighs and knees, and throws the 
centre of gravity more forward than in ordinary riding, 
grasping each bridle-rein, and holding his hands low upon 
the withers. He rarely moves the position of his hands and 
body, or if he does, it is imperceptibly, so as not to interfere 
with the pace and stride of the horse. The instrument for 
urging forward the horse is the spur, used according to the 
emergency and the temper of the animal. The whip is held 
in the right hand, only to be used when necessary at the final 
set-to, or ultimate struggle, when the arms are raised, and 
the position of the body changed, so as to produce a tem- 
porary excitement in the horse. Not only does the jockey 


THE RACE-HORSE. | 597 


consider the temper and capacity of his own horse, but the 
speed and capability of his rivals; and a part of his nice 
game is to avail himself of the advantages presented to him 
by the deficient powers of the rival horses, or the faults of 
the riders. His eye is directed to all their movements ; 
while to the observer he seems intent only on the part he 
has himself to perform. He seeks to gain the race, but with 
no more expenditure of his horse’s powers than suffices for 
the end. If his own horse possesses superior speed, but less 
endurance, his game is not to urge his rival forward, but to 
wait until he reaches the distance at which he knows his own 
superior speed will bring him in. If, on the other hand, his 
horse has greater endurance, but inferior speed, he reverses 
the manceuvre ; he presses his rival to his utmost powers, 
and trusts to the property which his horse possesses to carry 


him in first to the goal. But when the distance to be run is — 


very short, the artifices must be modified in a corresponding 
degree. In this case, it is important to get the horse the 
soonest possible on his utmost stretch, so that space may not 
be gained by the rival. No rules, however, can be given to 
suit all the cases that may arise. There are jockeys so per- 
fect in their art, that nearly every thing is trusted to their 
judgment; but there are numerous cases of others less skil- 
ful, as when boys must ride on account of the very light 
weight required, and then specific instructions are given by 
the training groom, founded on his knowledge of the horse, 
of the ground, and of the capacity of the rivals. There is 
always on the turf a certain number of jockeys of reputation, 
whose professional services are in continued request. These 
persons are frequently engaged to ride various races in a 
day, and are often required to make rapid and distant jour- 
neys from place to place. 


To adapt the jockeys to the weights required, the process - 


of wasting, as 1t is termed, is in use. The means used for 
wasting are, abstinence, walking exercise, sweating, and me- 
dicine ; the degree in which each is used depending on the 


558 THE HORSE. 


time allowed, and the temperament and condition of the 
patient. The dress is of stout soft flannel, and generally 
consists of from two to three pairs of drawers, and from four 
to six waistcoats and jackets, and over all a suit of loose 
common clothes. The jockey having taken some light food, 
starts early in the morning on his walk. He commences at 
a moderate pace, which he gradually increases ; and having 
gone a distance of four miles or more, he has usually a room 
prepared, in which he can partake of some warm liquid. 
Having somewhat rested himself, he returns homeward at 
a smart pace, usually swinging his arms to increase the 
muscular action. Entering the house in a state of profuse 
perspiration, he takes some warm liquid, and reposes for 
an hour or more covered with blankets: when the per- 
Spiration has subsided, he places his feet in warm water, 


sponges his body, and dresses himself as usual, taking care 


that his clothing is sufficiently warm, and avoiding unnecés- 
sary exposure to cold and moisture: He retires to rest at 
an early hour, and rises betimes to renew his walk. Coin. 
cidently with this exercise, he observes a strict and abste- 
mious diet: his common food is tea and plain toast, with a 
little animal food at noon. Distilled liquors are proscribed, 
and the only fermented one allowed is wine, and this in the 
smallest quantity, and largely diluted. Aperient medicines 
are sometimes used by those who dislike severe walking, but 
never with such good effect as the simple exercise. Under this 
system a man can reduce his weight a pound or more in the 
day, without injury to his general health, or temporary im- 
pairment of his natural vigour. On the contrary, all jockeys 
admit that they receive benefit from the training process, and 
that it is only when they return suddenly to a system of re- 
pletion that inconvenience is experienced. When jockeys 
exceeding the required weight are in practice throughout the 
racing season, they must keep to this system of diet with 
extreme rigour. Relaxation even for a single day will in- 
crease the weight of the body many pounds. A single glass 


THE RACE-HORSE. 559 


of brandy, by exciting the external absorbents, will undo the 
effects of several days’ wasting. It will appear, then, that 
it requires no slight degree of self-control in the jockey to 
maintain, during a period of seven months of laborious exer- 
cises, a system of abstinence to which the fast of Ramaddan 
is a jest; and it is not to be wondered at that, when his long 
lent is over, he is too ready to welcome the season of good 
cheer. It was the practice of Frank Buckle, on the last day 


- of the Houghton Meeting, always to order a goose for sup- 


per; and where is the lover of good things who might not. 
have envied Frank Buckle his goose ? 

Of the jockeys who have been in practice, some have been 
go distinguished that they are regarded as masters of their 
art. Francis Buckle first appeared as a rider in 1783, when. 
his weight, including the saddle, was a pound short of 4 st. 
He soon became the most successful rider on the turf. He 
rode the winners of five Derby, seven Oaks, and two St Leger 
stakes. In-1802, he took long odds that he would win both 
the Derby and Oaks, on horses not considered likely to win. 
His horse at the Derby was the Duke of Grafton’s Tyrant, 
with 7 to 1 against him. Young Eclipse, considered to be 
the best horse of the year, made play, and was opposed by 
Sir Charles Bunbury’s Orlando, who contested every inch 
for the first mile. Buckle, from his observation of the pace, 
and his fine judgment, was satisfied that both horses would 
flag, so following and observing them, he came up with 
Tyrant, and won; Tyrant being considered the worst horse 
that till then had won the Derby. Buckle had thus secured 
one of the two ends proposed. The other was effected under 
circumstances not less remarkable. The horse he rode, 


Scotia, was beaten three times between the Tattenham 


Corner and home, a distance of 4 furlongs; but, by dint of 
superb riding, Buckle got her again forward, and won the 
race byahead. Other instances might be given of his power 
to overcome difficulties by his judgment and fine horseman- 
ship. He was once beaten by a lady, Mrs Colonel Thornton, 


10 


560 THE HORSE, 


searcely, perhaps, inferior as a rider to himself. This was in 
a match between Colonel Thornton’s Louisa and Mr Brom- 
ford’s Allegro. Mrs Thornton, caparisoned in purple cap 
and waistcoat, with nankeen skirts, not so long as to conceal 
her embroidered stockings and purple shoes, took the lead 
at starting, and kept it till approaching the distance. Here 
Buckle, putting forth all his jockeyship, succeeded in gain- 
ing the lead ; but the lady, with no less address and skill, 
whipped her horse, pushed onward, and won the race by half 

a neck, This was the second race to her on the same day. 
In a match for four hogsheads of Céte Réti, 2000 guineas, 
and 600 guineas more betted on her account, she cantered 
over the course, Mr Bromford, against whom she was to 
ride, paying the forfeit. The same bold lady had once be- 
fore appeared in a match on the race-course at Knavesmire. 
A hundred thousand persons had assembled to witness the 
spectacle, and more than L.200,000 sterling depended upon 
the result. The lady, after displaying unwonted jockeyship, 


spirit, and good humour, lost the day, to the regret of the 
assembled multitude. Honest Buckle could scarce feel mor- 
tification at being overcome by such arival. He continued 
to ride with undiminished reputation till past his sixty-fifth 
year, and died lately in a state of honourable competence, 
leaving behind him the character of a perfectly honest, kind- 


hearted man. 
Samuel Chifney preceded Buckle in time, but was cotem- 


porary with him for a part of his career. Chifney stood in 
the first rank of riders of a former age. He was principal 
jockey of the Prince of Wales, the Duke of Bedford, the Earl 
of Grosvenor, and other sportsmen of the time. He wrote 
the work called “‘ Genius Genuine,” which, notwithstanding 
its absurd title, and barbarous style, is worthy of attention. 
It shews the distinction between the riding of the turf and 
that of the manége or hunting-field. Chifney likewise illus- 
trated the difference in practice, being as timid and awkward 
in the hunting-field as he was bold and skilful on the course. 
9 


— ss 


eer 


THE RACE-HORSE. | 561 


Chifney bequeathed his mantle to his son, long one of th 
most eminent jockeys of his day. 
Samuel Chifney the younger was distinguished by his bold- 


ness, his originality, his tact, his elegance of seat, and his 


judgment of what is termed pace. His maxim was to wait 
until the time of decisive action arrived, which he calculated 
with remarkable precision ; then stealing quietly but rapidly 
up to his opponents, he made the terrific rush, which decided 
the race. He was averse to “ making running,” as it is called, 
almost to a fault. Let the number of horses have been what 
it might, Chifney was generally amongst the last, calmly ob- 
serving the movements of his rivals, and waiting his time. In 
a famous race, in which his opponent was James Robinson, a 
rider not less distinguished in his style, than Chifney in that 
in which he claimed pre-eminence, the peculiar character of 
Chifney’s riding was finely shewn. Robinson, on Lucetta, 
led ; Chifney, on Priam, followed close in his wake. If 
Robinson attempted to look over his shoulder to see how his 
opponent was running, Chifney was bent to the opposite 
side, so as to be out of sight. In this manner the race was 
run almost from end to end, nor could Robinson once get 
sight of his wily adversary until the latter passed him to 


gain the race. When this Fabian horseman used to ride, 
the betting on his horse never failed to rise. 


Another rider, of a different School, but perfect in his own, 
is James Robinson, just mentioned, educated in the stables 
of one of the chief trainers of Newmarket. The distinguish- 
ing characters of this jockey are coolness, gentleness, and 
thorough tact. Robinson, though the most elegant rider on 
the turf, makes his Superiority be felt rather than seen. The 
greatest reliance is placed by every one on his steady judg- 
ment ; and so great is his success, that a popular saying is, 
that Robinson is worth half a stone to the horse he rides. All 
his fellows, Chifney excepted, have yielded the palm to this ac- 
complished rider, and feared to encounter his unfailing skill. 
He has won more races than any man on the turf. In 1827 

. 2N 


562 THE HORSE. 


he rode the winner of the Derby and St Leger, and, it is re- 
ported, received a present of L.1000 for the latter race from 
a gentleman whom he had never before seen. It is said that 
in 1824 he declared to his friends that he would win the 
Derby on Cedric, the Oaks on Cobweb, and be married within 
the week; all of which undertakings he accomplished.* Fur- 
ther accounts might be given, of the Goodisons and others 
of a former age ; and of the Scotts, the Days, and the Flax- 
mans, and others, of the present one; but these examples 
will suffice to shew the class of superior jockeys employed in 
the active duties of the Course. 


The next class of persons connected with the turf are the 


Training-grooms. Numbers of opulent sportsmen have their 
own training-grounds. The public establishments of the 
kind are at Newmarket ; at the towns of Epsom and Ascot ; 
at Black Hamilton in Yorkshire, on the road from Thirsk to 
Helmsley ; at Langton Wolds, near the town of Malton, and 
separated from the race-course by the public road ; at Middle- 
ham Moors, also in the county of York; at Whiteclift Moors, 
near the town of Richmond; and at the Curragh of Kildare. 
The Heads of those establishments are called training- 
grooms. They are persons in whose fidelity, judgment, and 
knowledge of the business of the turf, great confidence must 
necessarily be reposed. The more immediate duties of the 
training-groom are the care of the horses with respect to 
health, and preparation for the turf: but with these duties are _ 
joined others, of counsel and aid, founded on the trainer’s 
knowledge of the horses intrusted to him, and the general 
business of the turf. It is evident that, were a training- 
groom to be unfaithful, a given horse might neither be im 
the condition suited for running, nor under the other cir- 
cumstances favourable to his owner’s success. 

But what are the other classes concerned in this system 
of public sports? Who are the owners of these innumerable 


* Whyte’s History of the Turf. 


; 
a 
B 


THE RACE-HORSE. 563 


horses? What is the main support of this machinery? And 
who are the workmen who set in motion its countless wheels ? 
Whence: is derived that incredible ¢apital which is put to 
the hazard of chances in this deep and exciting game ? 

The horses of the turf are reared or acquired by many 
persons of the community, from the stabler, the training- 
groom, the horse-dealer, to the farmer, the country gentle- 
man, the master of fox-hounds, the opulent merchant, the 
banker, the peer. None is excluded from this lottery of fair 
prizes, and every one may derive reputation and advantage 
from the possession of a horse qualified to take his place in 
lists confined to no order of chivalry, and demanding no 
heraldry but the purse. No difficulty anywhere exists in 
obtaining horses-of the privileged caste. Great numbers of 
them break down in the preliminary trials, and many of the 
purest blood, after having run the first desperate match 
which disables them for ever, may be purchased for the price 
of carrion. Nothing, then, is so easy as to obtain the ma- 
terials for rearing the solitary Race-Horse, or, if the means 
allow, the extended stud; and, accordingly, if we shall look 
to our racing calenders, and inquire into the history of the 
horses entered to run at the different courses, we shall find 
that they are derived from every class of dealers, and breeders 
in the country. At the same time, there are always indi- 
viduals of opulence and rank, who have made the business 
of the turf an especial concern, and maintain extensive studs, 
from which they can make a fitting selection. 

Turning to the last century, which may be termed the 
golden age of the turf, we find amongst its unwearied sup- 
porters the Devonshires, the Boltons, the Rutlands, the 
Portmores, of those days; but perhaps the greatest sup- 
porter of the turf of the last age was William Duke of Cum- 
berland. This Prince possessed the most numerous stud in 
the kingdom. He was the owner of Herod, and of many fine 
horses. Herod, it has been seen, was the progenitor of a 
vast number of distinguished racers. In 1764, he beat the 


& 


POU ne oO RTE 0 Heroes. th siapln 


564 THE HORSE. 


Duke of Doncaster’s Antinous at Newmarket, with six to 
four on Antinous, for 500 guineas a-side; and in the follow- 
ing year he beat the same horse, giving him 91b., over the 
same course, for 1000 guineas a-side. The match excited 
_ greater interest than any previous one in England. It was 
won by Herod by half a neck, and more than L.100,000 
depended upon the issue. The Duke died in 1765. The 
year before his death, Eclipse was born in his stud, and 
passed into the hands of Mr O’Kelly, who became the great- 
est breeder of the time, chiefly from the blood of Kclipse. 
This individual was born in Ireland, of very humble parent- 
age. From the lowest degree of wretchedness he rose to 
extraordinary wealth. He entered deeply into all kinds of 
gambling, but, on the turf, displayed shrewdness, judgment, 
and caution. He bred many fine horses, and acquired the 
most valuable stud of breeding mares that any individual 
had before or has since possessed. Contemporary as a 
- breeder, for a period of his life, with the Duke of Cumber- 
land and O’Kelly, was the Earl of Grosvenor, whose stud 
came to surpass, in extent and magnificence, any that had 
preceded it. He had many horses of great reputation, and 
gained immense sums on the turf,—insufficient, however, to 
cover the expenses of his breeding establishment. He died 
in the year 1802, after fifty years’ connexion with the turf, 
his splendid stud passing into the hands of the late Marquis 
of Westminster. The Marquis of Rockingham and Lord 
Bolingbroke were likewise distinguished for their studs at 
this period, as were the Dukes of Ancaster, Cleveland, King- 
ston, Northumberland, and many more. The early part of the 
reign of George III., indeed, was remarkably noted for the 
great support given to the turf by persons of distinction. 
The King himself gave a judicious encouragement to the 
sport; and, during the progress of his memorable reign, the 
passion for horse-racing lost none of its force. On the con- 
trary, it extended with the greater opulence of the country, 
and studs and: race-horses increased in number, and in the 


THE RACH-HORSE. 565 


cost of the establishments. The Earl of Derby, the founder 


of the Oaks and Derby stakes, produced many fine horses on — 


the turf, one of which, Sir Peter Teazle, is distinguished in 
the annals of racing. The Earl of Clermont, who died in 
1834, at the age of eighty-three, having been nearly sixty 
_ years connected with the turf, the Honourable Richard Ver- 
non, and Sir Charles Bunbury, are noted amongst the sports- 


men of this period. The latter gentleman survived until. 


the year 1821, at the age of eighty-two, keeping up his con- 
nexion with the turf till the last. He was mainly instru- 


mental in doing away with the four-mile races at Newmar- es 


ket, and in producing the unhappy innovation of running 
two-year-old colts. 

The name of the Duke of Queensberry is associated with 
all the proceedings of this period. He was successful, shrewd, 
and skilful in resources. Old Q., as he was afterwards 
called, was never to be taken in. His famous carriage 
match, about the middle of the century, is well known. The 
match was for 1000 guineas. A. carriage was to be con- 
structed, with four wheels, to carry one person, and to run 
nineteen miles within the hour. On the day of trial, a car- 
riage, of the weight of an alderman, appeared on the heath 
of Newmarket, with spokes of whalebone, traces of silk, and 
so forth, drawn by four thoroughbred horses, ridden by boys, 
dressed, we are told, in blue satin waistcoats, buckskin 
breeches, and white silk stockings, followed by a postilion in 
red silk stockings, and preceded by a groom in crimson vel- 
vet, to clear the way. ‘The traces were made with Springs 
to roll up on the relaxing of the draught, so that they might 
not get beneath the horses; and cases of tin kept dropping 
oil on the axletree, to prevent its taking fire. A space for 
the course was corded in round the heath, and the fairy equi- 
page was in motion with the speed of the wind. The horses 
ran away with their riders, and did the first nine miles in 
four minutes; and the match was completed in fifty-three 
minutes twenty-seven seconds. Other Stories are on record 


' 
: > Conan SIEEEISERNDEEEPSENe = " 


rm 


SS ee 


piriorat hate ate ceo 


Sel acnoeein = a — 


566 THE HORSE. 


regarding the eccentric Duke. On one occasion of a match, 
a large sum of money was offered to his jockey, if he would 
lose the race. The jockey honestly told the Duke, who 
coolly desired him to take the money. When the horse came 
to the starting-post, the Duke too was there. He said he 
had a mind to ride the horse himself, so, throwing off his 
ereatcoat, he was seen to be equipped in racing attire, and 
mounting, he won the race with ease. In 1756, he had a 
successful match with the Duke of Hamilton, when both 
noblemen rode their own horses, and when enormous sums 
depended on the result. His horse, Dash, beat Sir Peter 
Teazle over the six-mile course of Newmarket; and he gained 
two others, thousand-guinea matches, three times round the 
Round Course, or a distance of about twelve miles. He kept — 
a select, but not.a numerous stud. He died in 1810, at the 
age of eighty-six. 

In 1784, we find the gay and accomplished Prince of Wales, 


then twenty-two years of age, an eager supporter of this class 


of amusements. In 1791, an event occurred, which caused 
the Royal Prince to quit the turf in disgust. The story has 
been often told; but, as it has not been always fairly told, it 
is but just to repeat it. On the 20th October, the Prince’s 
best horse, Escape, ridden by Samuel Chifney the elder, was 
beaten at Newmarket by Coriander and Skylark, Escape 
being the favourite horse in the betting.. On the following 
day, the betting being 5 to L against Escape, this horse, ridden 
by Chifney, beat Skylark and the other horses easily. At 
this result, a violent outery was raised by the losers, who 
did not hesitate to say that, on the 20th, Chifney rode to 
lose, and that the Prince himself was implicated. The cha- 
racter and station of the youthful Prince might have saved 
him from this cruel suspicion. He declared that he had no 
bets on the first day’s race, and but inconsiderable ones on 
the second. He caused Chifney to be rigidly examined, 
when the latter made affidavit that he had done everything 
which his judgment suggested to him to make his horse win 


THE RACH-HORSE. 567 


on the first day; and thirteen years later, in his Genius 
Genuine, he gave a narrative of the proceeding, accounting 
for the defeat of Escape on the first day by his being short 
of work, and for his winning on the second, by the effects of 
the- gallop, in putting him in trim. Notwithstanding the ex- 
planations given, the Jockey Club, through Sir Charles Bun- 
bury, informed the Prince, that if he suffered Chifney to ride 
his horses again, no gentleman would ride against him. The 
proceeding seems contrary to the rules of evidence, and the 
principles of fair dealing. The Prince declared his own in- 
nocence; and no fact, which has ever been communicated to 


the world, proved his guilt, or even rendered the surmise of | 


it probable. If he believed his jockey innocent, he could not 
dismiss him without injustice or dishonour; and the demand 
that he should do so, was in itself an insult and a wrong. 
The Prince felt it to be both, and for many years retired 
from all connexion with the turf. About the year 1800, 
however, his Royal Highness began to restore his stud, in 
which he took great delight, and resumed his accustomed 
amusement. He sent his horses to Brighton, Lewis, Ascot, 
Goodwood, and other meetings, even after he had ascended 
the throne, and by degrees restored the Royal stud to great 


magnificence ; and to his latest hour, his Majesty took much 


interest in the amusements of the course. The stud at 
Hampton Court passed into the hands of his late Majesty 
King William, who judiciously abandoned training for the 
turf, but acted on the principle of encouraging the breed of 
horses, by instituting annual sales of the young horses which 
were bred at the establishment. Soon after the accession of 
her present Majesty, the stud at Hampton Court was wholly 
broken up. Itis to be regretted that the horses, amongst 
which were some Arabians, presented by the Imaun of Mus- 
cat, believed to be of the purest of the Desert Breed, should 
have been dispersed, and carried to other countries. But, 
otherwise, the measure, which excited so much angry dis- 
cussion at the time, appears to have been discreet and wise. 


LASTER 


oy eI 


alg bp lice 


568 THE HORSE. 


Fitting encouragement can be given, by means of the Royal 
plates and otherwise, to the rearing of horses for the turf, 
without connecting with its concerns the personal acts of the 
. Sovereign. 

Of the other great supporters of the turf, from the period 
of the American war down to our own times, were Earl Fitz- 
william, who succeeded to the stud of his uncle the Marquis 
of Rockingham, and died in 1833 at the age of eighty-five, 
having been about sixty-two years actively connected with 
the turf; the Dukes of Grafton, Hamilton, Dorset, Portland, 
Bedford, and many noble persons more, all keepers of large 
studs. Of commoners the list is very extensive. Amongst 
these it will appear strange to include the illustrious name 
of Charles James Fox; yet so it was. Mr Fox’s own stud 
was not remarkable for its goodness, but he betted largely, 
as was the fashion at the time, and it is said with success. 
At a match at Newmarket in 1772, he is said to have won 
about 16,000 guineas, by taking the odds on a horse that lost 
by half a neck. On coming into office with Lord North, in 
1783, he suddenly gave up his stud, and abandoned the racing 
clubs ; but this was only for a season, for, when still in office, 
in the same year, we find him at the meetings of Newmarket 
exhibiting all his accustomed eagerness,—his marvellous and 
versatile genius appearing to vulgar observers as much in its 
proper sphere at the betting-post as in the senate. Approach- 
ing nearer to our own times, we find the name of Sir Henry 
Vane Tempest. This gentleman was early on the turf. A 
famous match of his is familiar to all sportsmen. His horse 
Hambletonian, got by King Fergus, dam by Highflyer, gran- 
dam by Matchem, ran a match with Mr Cookson’s Diamond, 
descended from Herod, over the course at Newmarket. The 
match was for 3000 guineas, besides large bets between the 
parties. So close was the contest, that, even within a few 
strides of the winning-post, the horses were head to head, 
when, by a grand effort, Hambletonian, ridden by Buckle, 
came in by half a neck. Incredible sums depended upon this 


a 


contest, the north country gentlemen betting on Hamble- 
tonian, who was Yorkshire born, and the Newmarket gentle- 
men as freely taking the odds in favour of his rival. In this 
contest the blood of Eclipse prevailed over that of Herod, and 


Sir Henry Vane Tempest, with just feeling, would never per- 
mit his noble horse to hazard his honours by entering the 
lists again. We find also living, or lately living, in our own 
times, amongst the supporters of the turf, the names of the 
Dukes of Grafton, Cleveland, Richmond, Rutland, Portland : 
the Marquises of Westminster, Exeter, Conyngham, and 
Sligo; the Earls of Egremont, Burlington, Warwick, Veru- 
lam, Chesterfield, Sefton, J ersey, Lichfield, Albemarle, Wil- 


ton; the Lords Lowther, Wharncliff, Suffield ; Sir Francis © 


Standish, Sir Mark Wood, Sir J. Shelley, Sir Gilbert Heath- 
cote; Generals Grosvenor and Gower; Colonels Peel and 
Wilson; Messrs Wilson, Wyndham, Rouss, and great num- 
bers more, recorded in the sporting annals of the times ; and 
even if we could exhaust the list of those who are chiefly 
found at the great courses, as Newmarket, Epsom, Ascot, 
Doncaster, we should have a catalogue behind of those who 
confine themselves to what may be called the provincial 
courses, and then we should have those who, without keep- 
ing regular racing studs, rear thoroughbred horses, and bring 
them from time to time upon the turf. 

The classes referred to are the legitimate supporters of 
this system of amusement. They bet upon the result; but 
the bet, generally speaking, may be regarded as secondary 
and subservient to the sport. But the sport involves not 


judgment on the merits of the rival horses, and on the chances 
of success or failure. No mode except the bet has been de- 
| vised, or appears suitable, for this purpose, and hence it has 
become an integral part: of the system. The bet, however, 
may degenerate into abuse, and connect with the business of 
the turf persons whose sole end is gain, and who avail them- 
Selves of the recognised usages of betting to make the sys- 


eee a 


THE RACE-HORSE. 569 


t »merely the contest for victory in the race, but the contest of 


570 THE HORSE. 


tem an engine of mere mercenary calculation. In this class 
are comprehended persons of various ranks of society, from 
the lowest retainers of the course, hostlers, discarded jockeys, 
and blackguards of every degree, to those who have the 
means to make good their engagements. The former are 
mere ruffians, known under the name of blacklegs, and fit- 
ting subjects for the pillory or the whipping-post. Many of 
the others are adventurers, who are not less alien to the 
legitimate business of the turf, who contribute nothing to its 
support, and who merely make it the subject of a calculation 
of chances for the purposes of profit. Some of these adven- 
turers, indeed, acquire studs, and then take their station 
amongst the contributors to the actual business of the course, 
the origin of their connexion with it being forgotten in their 
success. It is impossible, indeed, to draw a line of demarca- 
tion between such persons and those who merely bet as oc- 
casion offers. Numbers of these last are of the more opulent 
classes, as country gentlemen, the wealthier yeomen, and 


persons of trades and professions of all kinds. And besides 
these, are the ordinary frequenters of the racing grounds, 
who assemble merely to enjoy the spectacle, and bet, because 
it amuses them, on the favourite horses, or in such other 
way as the feeling of the moment dictates. It it plain that 
these classes are distinct in their relations to the turf from 


the class of gambling adventurers. The bet with them is 
merely part of the sport, and the test of judgment on the 
chances of the winning and losing horses. But doubtless 
there is a mixed class of feelings introduced, and no certain 
means exist for discriminating between the regular gambler, 
who speculates upon the events of the turf with the same 
feelings as on the chances of the dice, and those who make 
the business of betting secondary and subservient to the plea- 
sure and interest they derive from the spectacle itself. 

The institution of the Course is plainly one in accordance 
with national character, and interests deeply a great part of 
the population of all classes. The prevailing fondness for 


THE RACE-HORSE. BY AS 


this gay and animating pursuit need be sought for, it is ap- 
prehended, in no other principles of human nature than are 
employed to explain the love of all those sports and occupa- 
tions of the same kind which keep the mind in action. We 
need no more inquire why a man acquires a love for the race- 
course than for the chase, for travelling, or for active occu- 
pation of any kind. The machinery of human thought, it 
seems, must not be allowed to rust from inaction, and those 
who would limit its movements in any single course, assur- 
edly manifest an ignorance of human nature. What is term- 
ed amusement can no more be excluded from the category of 
human pursuits than the occupations of business, of philoso- 
phy, or of all the graver objects which occupy the mind, and 
which, as society advances, become more multiplied and va- 
ried. One of the sternest of ancient moralists declares, that 
the man who has no time to be idle is a slave; but the 
idleness of which he speaks is merely the diversion of 
thought to another class of objects. Limiting our reflec- 
tions to: the condition of society which exists in this coun- 
try, it were as foolish as vain to seek to restrict within 
too narrow a sphere the pleasures of the people. If they 
are rudely restrained within one channel, they may take 
another less favourable to private happiness, to public mo- 
rals, and to national character. The horse-race has been a 
pastime of the people of England for generations, has super- 
seded many rude and cruel sports, and has attained a re- 
finement in accordance with the spirit of a more cultivated 
age ; and it may be questioned if there is any one pursuit in 
the class of what are called public amusements, which, with 
so little prejudice to the character of the people, is calculated 
to produce so great a degree of interest and relaxation. It 
will be said that the system is tainted with the spirit of 
gambling and play. Would that it were less so! but the 
fact admitted does not invalidate the fair conclusions which 
may be drawn. ‘The love of gain cannot be truly said to be 
the primary end of those who delight in this gay and ani- 


Pay tl 


Seah aeemeeen an 


572 THE HORSE. 


mating spectacle. The bet is but the test of skill with respect 
to the issue; and the nature of the pleasure derived from 
success is not altered because the guerdon is a purse of gold 
and not an olive crown. If the gain is acquired, the loss is 
as freely hazarded. Will it be said that the whole is a game 
of chances, and therefore immoral? This sour morality has 
as yet found favour in no age of mankind. If the principle 
were admitted, that gain is unlawful when derived from a 
calculation of probable results, we must interrupt not only 
the pastimes but the business of mankind. We must close 
the stock exchange, proscribe assurance companies, and stay 
every freighted vessel that quits our shores on a voyage of 
adventure. The objection, we think, can scarcely be to the 
principle of the system of betting, as connected with the 
chances of the turf, but to the extent to which it is carried, 
and the abuses which accompany it. The sums hazarded, in- 
deed, are large ; but these must be measured in some sort by 
the wealth of the community and the usages of society. It 
does not appear that, in any kind of games, the greatness of 
the stake is a serious evil. Experience would rather lead to 
the conclusion that it is the reverse, as it affects the charac- 
ter and feelings of the parties concerned; and if at the race- 
course large sums are won, corresponding sums are lost, and 
the general balance is not greatly affected. With respect to — 
the abuses of the system of the course, these indeed are many, 
but all of them are not necessarily inherent in the system of 
the course. Persons make the business of the turf an engine 
of gambling; but it must be remembered that gambling is 
not confined to the turf; and that the same persons who 
gamble on the chances of a horse winning or losing at a race, 
will gamble on the chances of a dye, or any other contin- 
gency that presents itself. The gamblers of the towns, who 


SES 


STE rT ees AS ow aE 


scarcely know a horse from a cow, would, if horse-races 
were abolished to-morrow, find subjects equally suited to 
their purposes. It is not found that gambling is less ex- 
tended in countries where the race-course is unknown ; nor 


is 


; 1. 
eee 


THE RACE-HORSE. 573 


does it seem that morality in these countries would suffer if 
the hazard were on the winning of horses, i in place of on the 


chances of cards, or the turning of dice. 


But unhappily the abuses of the turf are of no trivial 
kind, and may excuse the severest scrutiny. These abuses 
have attained a magnitude which the world will find it diffi- 
cult to credit, and have been combined with a system of 
methodized villany and plunder, which, if not counteracted 
by all the power which can be employed, must, at no distant 
time, banish this noble pastime from the sports of the people 
of England, and drive away from its contamination its most 
honourable supporters. The system of betting, as applied 
to this amusement, it is to be observed, is of great com- 
plexity, involving calculations on the chances, not only of the 
winning, but of the losing horses, and on a variety of con- 
tingencies distinct from the chances of a horse winning or 
losing by the exercise of its powers. Often when bets have 
been taken on the winning or losing of a horse, contingen- 
cies may arise ‘to affect the result in a manner unseen. A 
horse that has one day been a favourite, and largely backed, 
may, on the following one, have his chances of winning re- 
duced to nothing. The person who bets watches the turn 
in the odds, as a stockbroker watches. the changes in the 
market, and avails himself of these by such a system of bet- 
ting and counterbetting, as throws the most expert calcula- 
tions of the Stock Exchange into the shade, and would do 
credit to the most skilful calculator of chances. A man, for 
example, begins to “ make his Book,’ as it is termed, at the 
new year, on the Derby, the Oaks, and other great stakes. 
The nominations have taken place when the colts were a year 
old, and consequently many of them die before the day of 
running, and many of them turn out good for nothing on 
trial; and of a hundred or more entered, only twenty may 
start. Now, reflecting on the vast variety of contingencies 
here called into play, until the horses appear at the starting- 
post, we may imagine what a curious complication this Book 


574 THE HORSE. 


must present, and how much of skill it must demand to place 
the bets in the most favourable position to gain, or to avoid 
loss. How often does it become necessary “ to hedge,” 
when a false or dangerous move has been made ; that is, to 
make a series of bets in an opposite course from the previous 
- ones. A man may win, by giving odds against every horse 
in the field. Thus, if five horses start, by betting 4 to 1 
against each, he loses nothing, for only one can win, on 
which he loses 4, and the remaining four lose, on which he 
gains 4; but if he bets 3 to 1 against all, he mus/ win, for 
on the winning horse he loses 3, but on the losing horses he 
gains 4. Iftwenty horses run, 18 to 1 may be betted against 
every horse in the field; for only one can win on which 18 
is lost, but nineteen must lose on which 19 is gained. This 
is the simplest case that can be put; but it shews that, by a 
skilful adjustment of odds, a man may gain a large sum on 
a race, while he cannot lose anything. But while it is rare 
for a person to be able to balance all his bets so that he must 
win, and cannot lose, yet the cases are innumerable in which 
he is able so to hedge or counter-bet, as to bring the chances 
in his favour for winning to a maximum, and reducing those 
against him to a minimum. Large fortunes have been ac- 
quired by skill in betting and counter-betting ; yet the sys- 
tem is legitimate in itself, and nothing more than a fair 
exercise of the knowledge. and address of the individual. 
But what shall be said if fraud is used, either to support the 
system, or to counteract it when fairly pursued ? What if 
horses heavily backed are fraudulently withdrawn from the 
course at the moment of running? What if those that 
could win are made to lose? It is seen that the owner of a 
horse may, by betting against his own horse, gain by his 
losing the race; and, by having his horse largely backed, 
and then running to lose, pocket enormous sums. ‘Trainers 
and jockeys are now in the habit of betting largely, not on 
the horses intrusted to them, but on the general business of 
the race. What a frightful temptation is this to people in 


Q 
o 


THE RACE-HORSE. 575 


their condition of life, and how multiplied is the temptation, 
when there are confederacies of gamblers, chiefly in the great 
cities, who have the means to offer bribes, too great for 
ordinary virtue to resist? Deceptive trials, and lying re- 
ports, may all lend their aid; and even the poisoned tank, 
and debilitating ball, may be called into action, the one to 
deprive the noble victim of life, the other, with scarcely less 
nefarious aim, to unfit him for exercising his powers when 
brought into the field. In the year 1812, a ruffian called 
Dawson, was executed for administering poison to various 
horses. He had been engaged in these practices for four 
years. He had effected his ends by means of arsenic or cor- 
rosive sublimate, sometimes introducing the poison by means 
of a syringe into the locked troughs at which the horses 
drank. The wretch suffered, while the heartless criminals 
who had set him on remained undiscovered. e 
One of the practices pursued is to get up favourites for 
the great stakes. This is done by means of lies, false trials, 
deceptive bets, high prices paid for horses, so as to enhance 
the public opinion of their value, and by devices of all sorts. 
Large sums are staked on the favourite horse by the public. 
But is it intended that he shall win? No: it is settled that 
he shall lose. A little management of the jockeys will save 
appearances, and thousands are to be duped that the owner 
and his confederates may pocket the spoil. Enormous sums, 
as 3000 guineas, or more, are paid for a colt, we will sup- 
pose, to start for the Derby. What is the meaning of this ? 
Is the owner to back this colt against a hundred horses he 
has never seen, twenty or thirty of which (many of them, for 
any thing he knows, better than his own) are to start? No: 
—The purpose is not to win the Derby. The owner and 
his confederates are to gain by the loss of the race, and the 
dupes are to back the favourite. One of the finest horses 
that has appeared on the modern turf, Plenipotentiary, who 
had never been defeated,—who had gained the Derby with- 
out a struggle,—and had walked over Ascot Heath, because 


576 THE HORSE. 


no horse had dared to contend against him,—started for the 
St Leger with 5 to 2 in his favour. Did he win the race ? 
A horse with 50 to 1 against him came in the winner. 
Another, who had not even been placed at the Derby, defeated 
this unrivalled horse, who came in the last but one of eleven 
that started. In the following year he reappeared at New- 
market with such success, as to make it be believed, that not 
a horse at Doncaster could have kept pace with him for fifty 
yards together. He was then backed at great odds to run 
at Ascot; but on the day before the race he was carried 
away, to the consternation of the backers, no one knew 
wherefore, and never again was seen on the turf. Don- 
caster had already become noted for exploits of a suspicious 
kind. In the year 1832, at the commencement of the meet- 
ing, it had become known that the proprietor of the Athe- 
neum gaming-house in London, as yet new to the public 
honours of the turf, had purchased Ludlow, a horse in high 
favour, for the St Leger, for 5000 guineas. Suspicion was 
at once excited, and mistrust accordingly marred the sport 
of the day. The gambler declared that all his intents had 
been fair and honourable ; that he had betted L.15,000 on the 
horse ; and defied all the world to prove that he had betted 
one guinea against him. 

The betting of jockeys and trainers, to a vast amount, has 
now become a sytem extensive, open, and avowed. It is no 
longer the restricted and temperate betting, which prevailed 
in former times, on horses in which the masters and employ- 
ers of these people had an interest, but they must have their 
Books as regularly as the boldest gambler of the course. 
Now, here is a system which strikes at the very root of all 
confidence in the affairs of the turf. What! the horses of 
sportsmen to be intrusted to a set of avowed gamblers, who 
may have a direct interest in causing their defeat. What 
confidence can be placed in a jockey on whose success in a 
match with another horse he or his confederates may have 
thousands depending? Will he win in opposition to an in- 


THE RACE-HORSR. 577 


terest so great? Those who believe so, must have a higher 
confidence in the virtues of N ewmarket than our knowledge 
of human: nature elsewhere justifies. The first admission on 
record of a jockey betting on the horse opposed to that which. 
he himself rode, is by the elder Chifney. He lost the race; 
but he justifies himself by saying, that he knew the horse he 
rode was unfit to win. The argument of the jockey is not 
worth the tassel of his velvet cap; and the principle con- 
tended for needs only a little extension to justify every kind 
of roguery. This very jockey lived to acquire a splendid 
stud, to build houses, to sport his equipage, and to experience 
the revolution of fortune’s wheel, by dying a beggar. But 
the training grooms, more trusted still, what can be said of 
their concern with the gambling speculations, by which their 
interest and their duty may be placed at variance? What 
need of their master-key to guard their troughs from the in- 
troduction of the arsenic or sublimate, or of the live fishes, 
to shew that the water is as pure as their own thoughts ? 
A few orders of the head groom on the training-ground, a 
few doses out of time of Barbadoes aloes, a gentle opiate 
from the apothecary’s shop, all for the health of the horse, 
will answer every end. Or, should these disgraces not be 
perpetrated, how many are the means by which races may 
be lost and won! A simple breach of confidence ‘may answer 
the end; information may be conveyed, sufficient to neutral- 
ize the hopes of the confiding employer, and the one Book be 
made square, although the other may become a memorandum 
of ruin. It were most harsh, most unjust, to say that, 
amongst the training-grooms of our great courses, there are 
not, and have not been, many worthy men, as incorruptible as 
the proudest that can command their services ; and the more 
to be honoured that they are exposed to such corruptions. It 
is the system which is here in question, which places men’s 
interest in opposition to their duty, and leads them into a 
temptation too strong for human weakness, That it is 
through the inferior instruments employed, that the higher 
20 


578 THE HORSE. 


and more guilty agents are enabled to move their machinery 
of fraud is beyond a question; for how should a race be lost 
at will, if those who ride the horses, or prepare them for the 
turf, were not implicated? These superior agents may, in- 
deed, influence the jockeys; and we must pity the poorer 
riders who are required to lose a race, although the scoun- 
drels that corrupt them are able to reward their obedience. 
It is the first lesson in deception they receive, the effect of 
which is to rear up a generation of profligates, ready to sell 
their services, until they shall have acquired the means to set 
up for themselves. But it is apparent that the facilities for 
this kind of corruption are immeasurably increased, when 
the superior jockeys and trainers enter on the turf as princi- 
pals, and become necessarily implicated in the same class of — 
proceedings. Therefore, we say, that the strictest means 
ought to be adopted for preventing trainers and jockeys from 
engaging in the gambling business of the turf. 

Of the effects of this system of pollution, the proceedings 
of the modern turf are a continued exemplification. It has 
almost ceased to be the practice to bet on horses, from a 
simple knowledge of their powers and qualities, as exhibited 
by their public running. The bet is often founded on pri- 
vate information, purchased ata high price, and by a betray- 
ing of confidence ; or on a knowledge of what parties bet for 
or against certain horses. ‘The trumps are marked, and the 
pack is shuffled, by those who are deepest in the game, while 
others are content to observe their superiors in intelligence, 
and to play their own stakes accordingly. When a number 
of influential bettors back a horse to lose, he will be a bold 
man who will back him to win, founding on mere knowledge 
of the animal’s powers. One of the best authorities upon 
such subjects declares, that a horse “ with the best blood of 
England in his veins, and the best jockey on his back, shall 
have no more chance to win, when backed heavily to lose, 
than a jack-ass.” Another authority, himself a rider and 
owner of race-horses, long ago declared, that, if Eclipse were 


THE RACE-HORSE. 579 


now in the field, and heavily backed to lose by certain influ- 
ential bettors, he would have no more chance to win than if 
he had the use of only three of his legs. In the great Derby 
Stakes of 1832, in which a chestnut colt, St Giles, of no pe- 
culiar promise, was the winner, it was believed that every 
horse but one had been “ made safe ;” and other examples 
could be given, in which similar Suspicions, whether ‘well 
founded or not, shew the opinion of the parties best qualified 
to judge of the integrity of those on whom the winning or 
losing of the race depends. Such is the condition to which 
the English turf is reduced by contederacies of gamblers and 
swindlers, who are able to apply their ill-gotten gains to 
contaminate the whole body of those whom money can render 
subservient to them. It is only within a period compara- 
tively short that this practice of wholesale villany has arrived 
at its full maturity of system, and that persons raised from 
the lowest condition of life, and pursuing gambling as a 
trade, have acquired that influence on the turf, which enables 
them to move the inferior puppets at their will, and elbow 
_from their proper place the legitimate supporters of this an- 
cient sport of the people. That abuses, and grievous ones, 
have always existed in the system, is too true; but these 
abuses were as dust in the balance to the heavy mass of 
profligacy and dishonour which now weighs down the scale. 
Foreigners will hear with wonder, that, not in the city of © 
London only, but in many of the larger provincial towns, 
there are regular establishments, where betting proceeds as 
systematically and constantly as the business of the Stock 
Exchange. In one great establishment alone in London, 
Tattersall’s, L.100,000 and more sometimes change hands 
ina day. But this is the regular establishment for gentle- 
men really connected with the turf. There are, however, 
clubs or houses in the Capital, which are mere places of 
gambling, where the parties frequently know nothing of 
horses, except as things to make money of. Many of these 
are a sort of low taverns, called Sporting Public-houses, fre- 


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580 THE HORSE. 


quented by broken-down hangers-on of the turf, and sharpers 
of every degree, who bet small sums, and make prey of 
trades-people and others, who are foolish enough to draw in 
this lottery of many blanks. But the grand performers in 
the play are a very different class of persons. These gentle- 
men have risen far beyond the vulgar honours of the Sport- 
ing-House. They “do the thing” on a princely scale, and 
ean exhibit “‘ Books” enough to make a “royal merchant” 
stare. 

The principal of the present “ extensive operators on the 
betting market,” as Mr Whyte gently terms them, are, or 
were, it seems, Messrs Theobald, Bland, Bond, Robinson of 


’ Manchester, Holliday, Justice, Greatorex, Wakefield.* Of 


the kinds of persons who, in the deep lottery of the turf, are 
able to rise with the wheel of fortune, the following graphic 
sketch, from the pen of Mr Apperley, the most useful and 
happy writer on this class of subjects, will convey an idea. 
“ Of the public racing men at Newmarket, Messrs Crockford, 
Gully, Ridsdale, Saddler, the Chifneys, &c., we need not say 
much, their deeds being almost daily before us. But look- 
ing at the extraordinary results of these men’s deeds, who 
will not admit racing to be the best trade going? Talk of 
studs, talk of winnings, talk of racing establishments! Our 
Graftons, Richmonds, Portlands, and Clevelands, with all 
their means and appliances to boot, are but the beings of a 
summer’s day when compared with those illustrious person- 
ages and their various transactions and doings on the turf. 
Here is a small retail tradesman dealing in a very perishable 
commodity, become our Modern Creesus in a few years, and 
proprietor of several of the finest houses in England! Be- 
hold the champion of the boxing-ring, the champion of the 
turf, the proprietor of a noble domain, an honourable mem- 
ber of the Reformed Parliament, all in the person of a Bris- 
tol butcher! Turn to a great proprietor of coal-mines, the 


* Whyte’s History of the Turf. 


vA 


THE RACE-HORSE. 581 


owner of the best stud in England, one who gives 8000 gui- 
neas for a horse, in the comely form of a Yorkshire footman ! 
We have a quondam livery-stable keeper, with a dozen or 
more race-horses in his stalls, and those of the very best 
Stamp, and such as few country gentlemen, or indeed any 
others, have a chance to contend with. By their father's 
account of them, the two Messrs Chifney were stable-boys 
to Earl Grosvenor at eight guineas a-year and a stable suit. 
They are now owners of nearly the best horses, and, save Mr 
Crockford’s, quite the best houses in their native town. 


There is the son of the hostler of the Black Swan at York, 


betting his thousands on the heath, his neckerchief secured 
by a diamond pin. Then, to crown all, there is Squire 
Beardsworth of Birmingham, with his seventeen race-horses, 
and his crimson liveries, in the same loyal but dirty town in 
which he once drove a hackney coach.” 

If the institution of the turf is to be preserved to the people 
of England, it is manifest that means must be used to free 
it from the taint and scandal which are now attached to it. 
In a country where the civil and moral relations of men in 
society are deemed worthy of regard, it is impossible that a 
System, based on deception, founded on the corruption of the 
humbler instruments employed, and methodized into a course 
of public plunder, can be suffered to remain grafted on the 
pastimes of the people. Here is no question of a wretched 
gambling-house to be put down, of a petty culprit for some 
miserable game of chances to be rendered amenable to penal 
statutes, but of a system of wholesale fraud, carried on by 


troops of plunderers in the face of day, supported by funds 


of incredible amount, and Spreading the poison of a danger- 
ous example through the medium of public sports. Is this a 
matter to be left to the conventional regulations of clubs, and 
to the inconsiderable powers of stewards of race-courses 2 
The matter, we say, is one of public concern, involving re- 
sults affecting national character, and public decency and 


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582 THE HORSE. 


morals; and if these popular sports are to be preserved at 
all, it is the imperative duty, too long neglected, of the legis- 
lative powers to provide for their fitting control. Can any- 
thing be more monstrous than that, when harsh laws are 
levelled against humble sports, a system of gambling, une- 
qualled for foul dealing in any country in the world, is suf- 
fered to take root in the heart of society, without a single 
check to its utmost abuse? Can the continued contact of 
such contamination be without its effects on the moral feel- 
ings of the people? Can the youth of the country come 
safely within the poisoned atmosphere of the betting-room, 
and learn that men may, without reproach, rise to affluence 
by the basest arts? Can the gentlemen of England main- 
tain the honour of their rank while mixing in the pursuits of 
felons, and sharing a dishonest spoil? Few lessons, let us 
be assured, are more dangerous to the people than that of 
successful fraud: And woe it is to a country, when men are 
taught to look lightly on offences which touch the principles 
of honest dealing. Excessive public gambling, under any 
circumstances, is perhaps to be regretted ; but when it is 
fraudulent at the same time, it calls for all the punishment 
which laws tempered with mercy can inflict on thieves and 
swindlers. It may be said that it would be difficult to reach 
this class of offences; and so it is to reach the crimes of 
forgery and other secret acts against society ; but ought the 
laws therefore to sleep, and allow the plunderer to carry off 
the spoil in safety? It cannot be doubted that a system of 
law vigilantly executed, applicable to the concerns of the 
turf, would quickly abate the existing evils, and restore this 
popular sport to at least its former character. This is not 
the place to enter on so wide and delicate a subject. A par- 
liamentary inquiry would seem to be the most suitable course, 
the effect of which would be to expose the full degree of the 
evil, and suggest the fitting remedies. All men who abhor 
fraud and value public decency should Support such an in- 


THE RACE-HORSE. 583 


quiry, and none more than the country gentlemen of Eng- 
land, who take pleasure in this sport of their ancestors, and 
desire to see it freed from pollution and dishonour. 

One abuse connected with the sports of the turf remains 
to be referred to, which does not demand the interference of 
the law, but may be corrected by the good feeling and judg- 
ment of the legitimate supporters of the course. 

The Race-Horse, we have seen, has been cultivated for a 
particular end, and the purpose of the breeders has been to 
call forth in the highest degree those characters which indj- 
cate the power of rapid motion. These purposes have been 
fulfilled, and the form of the animal answers the conditions 

“required ; yet this form does not wholly accord with those 
ideas of symmetry which, without relation to the particular 
uses of the horse, we might have formed. His length is - 
greater than coysists with perfect beauty, the power of speed 
having been sought for in a higher degree than that of strength 

and endurance. His legs are longer and his trunk smaller 
than the eye indicates as strictly graceful. The length and 
depth of the hind-quarters, a point essential to the power of 
making long strides, are extended to the degree of appearing 
disproportionate. The chest is narrow, and the fore-quarters 
are light, points likewise characteristic of speed. The neck 
is Straight rather than gracefully arched, and the pasterns 
are very long and oblique. Thus may the Race-Horse not 
only lose somewhat of that apparent harmony of parts which 
the eye delights to trace in the animal world, but some even 
of the really valuable properties of the horse may be sacri- 
ficed to insure others which, with relation to mere utility, may 
be of secondary importance. Thus, strength and the power 
of endurance may be sacrificed for the property of speed, and 
even soundness of constitution to the artificial uses to which 
we destine the animal. Not only may these things be, but 
there is reason to infer that this yet unrivalled breed has 
already suffered deterioration. 

It is difficult to institute a precise comparison between the 


584 THE HORSE. 


horses of a former age and those of the present day ; but it 
is the opinion of the most careful observers, that the present 
breed of Race-Horses has for a period past been tending to 
become small, long limbed, delicate in constitution, and, 
accordingly, inferior to the older horses of the turf. The 
reasons assigned are, unfortunately, sufficient to account for 


the effect, or rather the effect must necessarily result from 
the causes in operation. In the former practice of the turf, 


the courses were of several miles, and the horses were not 
brought upon the field until of an age when their form was 
developed and their strength matured. Now the practice 


Se eae 


prevails of having very short courses, and of running the 


horses at two years old or earlier, From the first of these 
causes, speed alone is locked to as the end to be aimed at, 


without relation to the essential properties of endurance and 


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strength ; and from the second cause results the yet greater 


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evil of calling into action the powers of the animal before he 
has acquired the strength and development of parts which 
fit him for the services demanded from him. Now, expe- 
rience shews that we are able to adapt by degrees the form 
and habits of the animal to the conditions to which we sub- 
ject him. We can cultivate the characters of form which 
have relation to speed, rather than those which have rela- 


i | 
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ete os 


a 


tion to strength, and we know that the early development of 
form which enables us to call his powers into premature ac- 
tion, may, to a certain degree, be arrived at by the stimulus 
of feeding, and by training at an early age. The latter re- 
sult, however, cannot be attained without a violence done 
to the natural habits of the animal, and an impairing of the 
powers of the constitution ; and these things affect injuri- 
ously not only the individual, but the progeny to. which its 
properties are communicated. The system of short races is 


justified on the ground that, in the case of the long course, 
there is only a part of the space passed over at which the 
animal is urged to his utmost speed, and that therefore the 
long course is unnecessary for the essential purposes of the 


THE RACE-HORSE. Sato 585 


race. The argument is not perfectly satisfactory. The 
race is a trial of the power of the horse, and of the skill of 
the rider, and we diminish the claim of Superiority in both 
when we reduce the contest to a furious gallop. Is it no- 
thing to take from the interest and curiosity of the spectacle, 
to lessen its value as a trial of the powers of the animal, and 
to reduce.to the mere determination of a bet that which can 
be rendered subservient to the gratification of public taste, 
and to purposes yet more useful? But if an argument can 
be used in favour of this innovation upon the ancient prac- 
tice of the turf, with respect to the distances to be passed 
over, what shadow of an argument can be produced to justify 
the practice of employing horses in this severe exercise, and » 
in the laborious training which it demands, before they shall 
have acquired their natural powers? The growth of the 
Horse is indeed very rapid for so large an animal, but yet a 
few years are absolutely required to allow his fine form to 
acquire its full expansion and adjustment of parts, his bones. 
and cartilages to attain their due solidity, his muscles, liga- 
ments, and tendons, to arrive at their natural toughness and 
Strength. The slightest knowledge of the physiology of the 
animal makes us acquainted with these truths, and shews 
that he undergoes from his birth to maturity of youth a 
series of progressive changes, which we ought not to inter- 
_ rupt. Why should we anticipate powers which will be so 
soon at our command without reproach? What is a year, 
or what are two years gained, of services from the young 
and immature animal, when we consider how many more we 
may deprive ourselves of when he is more fitted to render 
them. Nothing is better established in the practical ma- 
nagement of the Horse, whether intended for the chase, for 
‘the carriage, or for the labour of heavy draught, than the 
importance, with relation to his future services, his health, 
and longevity, of never over-taxing his powers of action 
when young; and in the case of the horse designed for the 
turf, the error is, if possible, yet more palpable. The powers 


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586 THE HORSE. 


which the Race-Horse is required to exercise are those of 
excessive speed, which infers the greatest tension and dis- 


placement of parts of any other kind of labour. Nothing, it 


is known, gives so great a tendency to founder, spavin, curbs, 
sprains, hernia, and the like, as excessive exertion of the 
powers of speed by a young animal; and, even when no per- 
ceptible effect of this kind is produced, how often are the 
seeds of disease sown in the system, to appear in an after 
season in the disordered functions of the respiratory and 
other organs? Nor is this all in the case of the Race-Horse 
thus cruelly misused. To fit him for his future task, he 
must be deprived of liberty, and subjected to artificial feed- 
ing and training almost from the time he quits the side of 
his dam. No time is allowed him for that exercise in the 
fields which. his instincts point out as the most suitable and 
natural, nor for partaking of that food in the open air, which 
is the best fitted of all others to preserve health, and answer 
the demand of the sanguiferous system in a young animal. © 
He must be trained, bled, physicked, sweated, and subjected 
to restraint in his natural motions, at the time when the 
animal functions should have their natural play. Can any 
one who has any knowledge of the animal system in general, 
or of the temperament of the horse in particular, doubt that 
such a system must enfeeble the powers of the body, and act 
injuriously upon the progeny? Is it possible to believe that, 
under a system of this kind, carried to the degree to which it 
now is carried, numbers of the turf-horses of England are 
not broken down and undermined in constitution long before 
their natural powers have been perfected? Childers and 
Kelipse did not appear on the turf until the age of five. 
Had these fine creatures been run at the age of two, a very 
different estimate might have been formed of their powers, 
and themselves have been racked, foundered, or otherwise 
injured, before their full forces could have been exhibited, 
and thus the English Turf might have been deprived of all 
the benefit which it has derived from the numerous progeny 


THE HUNTER. — 587 


which these animals left behind them. Further, the Race-. 
Horses of England have become the boast of the country, 
and are the means by which the property termed blood is 
communicated to all the inferior races. Is it fitting that a 
breed of horses which has been cultivated with so much care, 
which has attained to so much excellence, and which may 
be applied to purposes so useful, should undergo deteriora- 
tion, in however slight a degree, in order to promote the 
purposes of selfishness and gambling ; and of gambling, too, 
not depending upon the powers of an animal capable of ex- 
erting them, but of a young creature overburdened by a cruel 
task? What is this but the stealing of a miserable year 
or two from the youth of the growing horse, that he may 
sooner bring to his owner an unworthy gain? The scandal 
should be proscribed on the English Turf. If the feelings 
of those engaged in it will not lead them to abandon it, legis- 
lation will not be out of place to preserve the breed of these 
noble horses, and protect them from the cruelty and impro- 
vidence of their masters. 


Il.—THE HUNTER. 


To the Horses which, in the British Islands, are peculiarly 
fitted for the exercise of the modern chase, it is usual to 
apply the term Hunters. These form a class rather than a 
breed of horses, because different varieties of horse may be 
used for the purpose of hunting, as the Race-Horse itself, 
or the superior class of saddle-horses of any kind. Yet, as 
the methods of hunting now pursued throughout the country 
are nearly similar, and as horses possessing a peculiar kind © 
of properties are the best suited for this exercise, a certain 
similitude of characters has been established between all the 
members of the class. 

The modern Hunter differs greatly in his characters and 
form from the horses formerly employed in the chase in this 


tie Wedel na arada die oi ae sarge TS 


SS eee 


588 THE HORSE. 


country, having partaken of that tendency to a lighter form, 
of which all the horses used for the saddle have partaken, 


“.and this in an increasing degree within the last half century. 


The same means, although with certain modifications, have 
been employed to form the Hunter as those used for the 
Race-Horse. The lighter and more agile horses of the 
warmer countries have been mixed in blood with the pre- 
existing races, so that the form of the latter has been moulded 
to a new standard. But this has not been done with the 
Same system in the case of the Hunter as of the Race-Horse 

nor with the same exclusive reference to the properties of 
speed. No breed of distinct lineage has been formed, whose 
descendants, mixing only with one another, have at length 
approached to a common type. The Hunters have been 
mixed not only with one another, but with every other race 
which seemed fitted to give the conformation and characters 
required. The Horses of Spain, Ttaly, and Turkey, nay, of 
Barbary and Arabia, have been resorted to in the case of the 
Hunter as of the Race-Horse; but the greatest and most 
direct effect has been produced through the medium of the 
Race-Horse itself, which has been employed ever since the 
institution of the regular Course to communicate its proper- 
ties to the Hunter, as to the other classes of saddle-horses of 
the country. This mixture of the blood of the Race-Horse 
with that of the horses designed for the chase has been con- 
tinually increasing, so that the characters of the modern 
Hunter have been more and more approximating to those of 
the thoroughbred horse. Yet a great distinction has hitherto 

existed, and ought still to be preserved, between them. The 


-Race-Horse is designed essentially for the exercise of the 


property of speed: the Hunter is also required to possess a 
degree of speed sufficient for the uses to which he is des- 


‘tined, but with this he should be possessed of endurance, 


and of the strength required for carrying the weight of his 
rider over an unequal surface. We may, if we please, so 


alter the character of the chase as to render it a rapid gallop 


THE HUNTER. - B89 


for a short Space, so that fleetness and lightness shall be 
more sought for than strength and the power of endurance ; 
but even in this case a distinction will exist between the 
characters suited for the Course and those required for the 
Hunting-field. The Hunter should possess a good fore-end, 
that he may pass safely along the rough surface over which 
he is urged, and over the obstacles which he encounters. 
The low fore-end and elevated hind-quarters, which are suited 
to the power of rapid -progression over a smooth surface, 
would, in the Hunter, be inconsistent with safety ; and the 
tendency to the ewe neck, which, in the short and violent 
gallop of the Course is admissible, would, in the case of the 
Hunter, be inconsistent with Sensitiveness to the rein and 
the ease of the rider. The neck of the Hunter should be 
sufficiently muscular, and his chest just so broad as to indi- 
cate strength without heaviness. The long stride of the 
Racer not being required in the Hunter, he should possess 
the conformation which indicates strength in the dorsal and 
lumbar regions, that is, he should be well-ribbed home, and 
have the back moderately short. In the length and develop- 
ment of the hind-quarters, in the formation of the limbs, 
muscular to the knee and hock, and below these joints tendi- 
nous ; and, indeed, in almost all the other characters which 
indicate a well-formed horse, the two classes may be said to 
agree, except that the Hunter should be shorter legged, ac- 
cording to the common expression, that is, Should have the 
limbs bear a less proportion to the trunk than the Racer, in 
whom this character may be sacrificed for speed. To de- 
scribe the Hunter, indeed, is merely to describe a well-formed 
horse, in which exists that harmony of parts which consists 
with the best exercise of the powers of the animal. The per- 
fect English Hunter is beyond a question the finest variety 
of horse that exists in any country, combining in a yet hap- 
pier proportion than the Race-Horse the lightness of the 
horses of the warmer regions with the strength of the ancient 
‘races of Kurope. If we compare the Hunter in his confor- 


pisujablinepspeshecowtaipaantignsasneebibiesineaie=nanasaieaetaemmamaeaeaemiae . 


590 THE HORSE. 


mation with the Race-Horse, we shall find him inferior in 
the characters which indicate the power of speed, but far 
excelling in those which shew the adaptation of the animal 
to useful services. The vast number of these beautiful horses 
that are found in this country, not merely employed for the 
chase but for the saddle, for military chargers, and for 
chariots and the lighter carriages with which the country 
abounds, excite the admiration of strangers, greatly more 
even than the exciting spectacle of the race-course, and 
manifest in a more obvious manner the perfection to which 
the cultivation of the Horse has been carried amongst us. 
It is a truth, that it is this class of horses which is princi- 
pally sought for by foreign agents, and that for many years 
past a great and silent drain of them has been taking place 
to other countries. Foreign dealers and agents are con- 
stantly looking out for superior mares and stallions of this 
class. We hear of the thoroughbred horses that are carried 
off, but we are unsuspicious of the vast extent to which, 
under the unnoticed operations of common trade, the expor- 
tation of the most useful horses of all is continually taking 
place: It is certain that it is to this cause that is to be 
ascribed the difficulty which is everywhere complained of, in 
procuring good horses for the saddle. The mares, on which 
the breed depends, being removed, the market ceases to be 
supplied as before. No remedy exists for this evil but that 
increase of the price which shall render the home market 
more profitable than the foreign, and the exciting of public 
attention to the value and importance of the class of horses 
which we are suffering to escape from us. We may be 
assured, that the race of true Hunters, if materially di- 
minished or injured in its characters, will not without 
great difficulty be restored. A simple cross between a 
thoroughbred horse and a common mare may produce a good 
individual ; but this is very different from that progressive 


4 s + ° 
change by which a class of characters can be communicated 


and rendered permanent, and a true breed formed. It may: 


THE HUNTER. 591 


be believed that, while Britain preserves the opulence of a 
great commercial and manufacturing country, the wealth of 
the inhabitants will give encouragement to the production of 
the best horses, as well as of every thing else which the 
wants of such a community call for; but horses with the 
properties required will not start up at the command even 
of wealth, and we must take the means to preserve the pro- 
perties which ages of diligent cultivation have communicated 
to our horses, if we design to preserve them in the most 
perfect state. While horsemanship is pursued amongst us, 
as a pleasing and exhilarating exercise, and while the su- 
perior saddle-horses are in request for the luxury of the 
lighter equipages, it may be believed that there will always 
exist a great demand for the races of horses combining 
strength, action, and speed. But it is for the Hunting-field 
that a large part of the supply will be required, and there- 
fore it is to be desired that this elegant, manly, and popular 
amusement should be so conducted, as to aid in the main- 
tenance and improvement of that fine race of horses which 
is rendered subservient to it. 
The practice of the modern Hunting-field differs essen- 
tially from the methods of pursuing game adopted in former 
times in this country, or in others where the larger beasts 
of chase abound. The dogs employed in the modern chase 
are a variety of a race, which will be described in the sequel, 
distinguished from the most ancient times by following their 
prey by the scent, hunting in concert, and employing the 
- voice in the manner of certain wild dogs, for the purpose of 
cheering their fellows or terrifying their victims. 
Of the kinds of hunting pursued in this country, that of 
_ the Stag, Cervus Elephas, came to be regarded as the most 
noble, and was eagerly practised when other kinds of game 
had become scarce. During the reigns of the Norman Kings, 
the preservation of this species of deer, and of the roebuck, 
likewise an indigenous species, was especially aimed at in 
those inhuman forest-laws which so long dishonoured the 


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092 THE HORSE. 


country. During the reigns of the Stuart Princes, the chase 
of the stag still continued to be the favoured pursuit of the 
privileged classes, but the numbers of the animals became 
gradually thinned, so that, by the beginning of the last cen- 
tury, they were scarcely to be found in the wild state. In 
the Highlands of Scotland they are yet in considerable num- 
bers, but in a country so wild, dangerous, and rocky, that they 
cannot be pursued by horses and hounds. When stags could 
no longer be found in their wild state in the woods, it became 
common to rear them in enclosures, and turn them out to be 
pursued: but this destroyed the very idea of hunting; and 
though the sport was pursued by George III., and till our 
own times, it has lost all favour amongst sportsmen of the 


present day, who are in the habit of ridiculing it as “ calf- 


hunting.” The ridicule is in no degree merited with refer- 
ence to the hunting of the stag in his natural state, which is 
undoubtedly the most noble and animating of all the kinds 
of chase in which the hound is employed. With the decline 


_ of the hunting of the deer, that of the Hare, which had been 


a very ancient sport, gained ground. The hounds employed 
in this amusement were early termed Harriers and Beagles, 
the latter a race of dogs with sharp but musical voices. Con- 
siderable numbers of harriers are still maintained in differ- 
ent parts of the country, but a greatly swifter race of dogs 
being employed, the sport has wholly changed its character. 
The runs are more rapid and short, with some loss, assuredly, 
of that pleasure which was derived from observing the ex- 
quisite powers of the pack, and the artifices of the prey. 
The substitution of the Fox for the Hare is comparatively 
vecent. Although foxes were followed and killed by various 
means, with the same feelings as other noxious animals were 
destroyed, it seems only to have been about the beginning 
of last century that they began to be regularly pursued by 
hounds as a source of amusement. It was soon found, how- 
ever, that this animal, after the destruction of the deer and 
other game of the woods, was really the best suited of all 


10 


THE HUNTER. 593° 


others for the sports of the field, possessing strength, hardi- 
hood, and speed, sufficient to eall forth the utmost powers of 
the pack. With the increasing improvement of the country, 
too, and the diminution of the larger forests, the haunts of 
the animals became more known, so that they could be rea- 
dily found, while the multiplication of artificial coverts of. 
Sorse and brushwood, with the increase of the smaller game 
which served them as food, afforded the means of increasing 
their numbers in almost any degree required. 

This new kind of sport continued to be received with in- 
creasing favour during all the reign of George III., and by 
degrees underwent great changes. The breed of dogs was 
rendered more compact and symmetrical in their form, and 
consequently more agile and fleet; and a lighter kind of 
horses was employed. The general practice of the Hunting- 
field, too, was insensibly changed. Under the older system, 
the hounds were taken out by break of day, and the fox, 
after having returned from pursuing his prey during the 
night, was tracked to his cover by the scent of his returning: 
footsteps, or, in technical language, “ the drag ;” so that. 
there were in truth two chases, the one the tracking of the 
animal to his cover, and the other after he was “ unkennel- 
led,” corresponding with the modern fox-chase. The hounds 
are now at once taken to the cover, and, in place of the tem- 
perate riding of former times, the sportsmen press more 
closely on the pack, which may justify the modern phraseo- 
logy of riding to hounds, in place of the former more correct 
expression of riding after or following them. The chase hag 
now become a short and fiery gallop, and few horsemen, out 
of a numerous field, can keep pace with the pack when at 
Speed. It has now become common to have relays of horses, 
so that the sportsman may mount ’a fresh Hunter when his 
first one is exhausted. In every part of England are to be 
seen packs, brought to the utmost perfection with respect to 
equipment, and the breeding and discipline of the hounds; 
but Leicestershire has acquired a sort of pre-eminence, from 

2P 


594 THE HORSE. 


the number and excellence of the packs maintained in it, the 
nature of the country, consisting chiefly of meadows of old 
turf, and from the great resort of opulent sportsmen. It is 
here, and especially at the little town of Melton-Mowbray, 
that the stranger will best learn the nature of the sport as it 
is now pursued. The times and places of meeting of the 
various packs having been advertised, the preparation begins 
by the various horses being sent off to cover, the principal 
sportsmen sending two horses, each mounted by a groom, 
one of which is to serve as a relay. In an hour or more, the 
sportsmen themselves are to be seen in motion, some riding to 
cover on their hacks, as they are termed, but which, in truth, 
are horses of the first class, whilst others are to be seen 
rolling rapidly along in their gay and glittering equipages ; a 
singular contrast with the same sport in times when the 
good squire, roused from his slumbers long before the break 
of day, sped his weary way through mist, darkness, and mud, 
to the place of meeting. The hour of assembling is usually 
eleven, when a field of from one to two hundred sportsmen is to 


be seen congregated from all the neighbouring country near 


the place of throwing off. The whole has an air of business 
and system, surprising to those who have been used to the 
pomp and clamour of the chase of other countries. There is 
assembled a concourse of persons of every rank, from the 
farmer to the peer, all with the air and feeling of independ- 
ence, mounted on highly-conditioned horses, and deeply in- 
tent on the dangerous and exciting game to be played. The 
Fox is almost certainly found in the first cover, or in one of 
the neighbouring ones, so that what are called blank days 
very rarely occur. When the fox breaks cover, followed by 
the leading hounds, the eager crowd of horsemen is all in 
motion and at speed. But it were useless to describe a scene 
familiar to so many, and which must be seen to be at all un- 
derstood. It suffices to observe, that the chase is a rapid gal- 
lop, interrupted by the most formidable obstacles of fence, 
gate, stile, and brook, which a completely enclosed country 


THE HUNTER. . 595 


ean present. The courage and bottom of the horses, and 
the boldness and address of the riders, are deserving of great 


admiration; and it may be safely said, that there is no 
School of horsemanship in Europe which can at all be com- 
pared with an English Hunting-field. But perfect as the 
general system has been rendered, it is to be feared that re- 
finement has been carried to its limits, The rapidity of the 
pace has been carried to a degree that assimilates the sport 
to a race, animating, certainly, in the highest degree, but dif- 
fering in its character, and in the feelings which it excites, 
from the legitimate exercise of the Hunting-field. The effect 
begins to be perceived in the character of the horses em- 
ployed, which, in the great hunting countries, are manifestly 
tending to a lighter form than ought to characterize the 
genuine Hunter. Nay, it is now very common for sportsmen 
to use horses entirely thoroughbred ; and, if such horses are 
sufficiently trained for riding, it cannot be denied that they 
possess properties which fit them for the short and violent 
exercise which they are required to undergo. The fact, how- 
ever, proves, that the increased speed and diminished length 
of the chase have been carried even beyond the bounds which 


a Just consideration of the nature of the pursuit should as- 


Sign to it. ; 

An argument employed in justification of the excessive 
Speed of the modern chase is, that it has become necessary, 
in order that the hounds may escape from the pressure of 
the crowd of horsemen, who are now more numerous than 
in former times. The reagon can scarcely be held to be suf- 
ficient. The present mode of riding to hounds is merely a 
fashion, introduced at the end of the last century, and may, 
like every fashion, yield to the influence of the taste and 
judgment of those whose situation. enables them to set an 
example. The modern Fox-hound could easily be bred back 
a little to the older Standard, without any impairing of his 
essential properties ; while a more subdued system of riding 
would probably afford a pleasure more accordant with the 


596 THE HORSE. 


nature of the pursuit. But however this be, a relaxation of 
the speed of the chase would certainly tend to preserve the - 
distinctive character of that unrivalled race of horses, which 
is rendered subservient to this fine and animating exercise. 
The generous sportsman may look to something beyond the 
triumph of his own skill in excelling a field of numerous com- 
rades. He may look to the Hunting-field as an arena in 
which all may find delight, and which collects together indi- 
viduals of every degree in a common pursuit. The sport is 
truly British, and has as yet taken root in no foreign land. 
It is a pursuit which is in accordance with the gay hilarity 
of early life, which binds the youth of the country to the 
halls of their country homes, and which provides a substitute 
for those less manly amusements which, in other countries, 
become necessary to fill up the intervals of more serious 


occupation. 


IIL—HORSES FOR LIGHTER CARRIAGES AND THE 
SADDLE. 


The RAcE-HORSE may either be regarded as a Breed, 
constituted by a common set of characters, or as a Class, 
composed of individuals reared and educated for a particular 
purpose. This variety, it has been seen, is wholly of mixed 
lineage, and deviates more from the type proper to the coun- 
try than any other. The basis was the ancient Horses of 
England, which were modified, after the Norman Conquest, 
by progressive changes, and at length by a large infusion of 
the blood of the Horses of Africa and Western Asia. The 
mixed progeny thus formed, being made to breed only with 
one another, or with the races of the East, to which they 
were already allied in blood, have assumed the common cha- 
racters of a family or race. Their form is that which an 
almost exclusive attention to the property of speed has 
tended to produce. They have the broad forehead, the bril- 


LIGHTER CARRIAGE AND SADDLE HORSES. 597 


‘liant eyes, the délicate muzzle, the expanded nostrils, and 


the wide throat, characteristic of their Eastern progenitors. 
Their light body is comparatively long, and suited to the ex- 
tended stride. Their chest is deep, so as to give due space 
to the lungs, but comparatively narrow, so as not to over- 


_ load the fore extremities, and throw the limbs too far asun- 


der in the gallop. Their shoulder is oblique, to give free- 
dom of motion to the humerus; and their haunch is long and 
deep beyond that of any other known race of Horses, indi- 
cating the length of those bones of the hinder extremities on. 
which the power of progression essentially depends. 

_ The HuytsEr, so named from the gay and exciting exer- 
cise to which he is destined, is rather to be regarded as form- 
ing a class than a breed, since different varieties-of horses, if 
they possess sufficient speed and bottom, may be used for the 
chase. The modern Hunter, like the Race-Horse, is derived 
from the pre-existing races of the country; but, in place of 
a direct mixture with the Horses of the East, he has gene- 
rally had the property of blood communicated to him through 
the intervention of the Race-Horse. This variety presents a 
greater diversity of characters than the Race-Horse. The 
individuals are made to breed less exclusively with their fel- 
lows, and a less jealous attention is paid, in the breeding of 
them, to purity of descent. They do not require the power 
of rapid progression in the same degree as the Race-Horse, 
but they demand the possession of properties in which he 
may be, and often is, greatly deficient; namely, action, and 
the power of enduring fatigue, Any good saddle-horse may 
be a hunter, and the Hunter therefore does not form an ex- 
clusive caste like the Race-Horse, but a class into which any 
kind of horse may be admitted which possesses the proper- 
ties required. The true English Hunter must be regarded 
as a saddle-horse of the first-class, combining, in the propor- 
tion required, the strength of the races of Northern Europe 
with the spirit and flectness of those of the South and East. 
Not only are these Strong and elegant horses employed in 


598 THE HORSE. 


the exercise of the hunting-field, but they are used for the 
ordinary purposes of the saddle, for military chargers, for 
the lighter wheel-carriages which luxury has multiplied, and 
even for many of the innumerable public vehicles which the 
improvement of roads has brought into operation in every 
part of the kingdom. 

From the Race-Horse, which occupies one extremity of the 
chain, and the Hunter, which, though inferior to him in speed, 
ig superior in useful properties, down to the races in which 
either no admixture, or a slight one, of foreign blood exists, 
the varieties of horses used for the saddle, or for the lighter 
carriages of all kinds, are without definable boundaries. 
Each individual, indeed, may be said to form a variety, 
according to the degree of crossing with those of higher 
breeding. A common mare with a thoroughbred stallion, a 
hunter, a coach-horse, or any male of an intermediate degree 
of breeding, will give birth to a different variety in each case, 
and each of these varieties again will produce another, ac- 


cording to the race or breeding of the male employed. Hence 
it is that we see in this country horses of such endless variety 
in size, form, aspect, and properties. In other countries, the 


horses of a large district usually present a certain similitude, 
which connects them together as a breed or family. In Eng- 
land, every kind seems to be collected, with no greater re- 
| semblance between the individuals than if they were brought 
\ from different parts of the globe, 

In general, the saddle and carriage horses of this country 
have been tending, for a period past, to the lighter form cha- 
racteristic of superior breeding, and many of the older varie- 
ties have either become rare or extinct. This change has 
been proceeding in an accelerated ratio since the commence- 
ment of the present century. It may be ascribed to the in- 
creasing taste for the lighter and more elegant forms of the 
Horse ; but in an important degree also, to the improvement 
in the means of internal communication, and a change in the 
modes of travelling. 


LIGHTER CARRIAGE AND SADDLE HORSES. 599 


_ Within the last sixty or seventy years, a surprising revolu- 
tion has taken place in the means of communication through- 
out the British Islands, by the extension and improved con- 
struction of roads. The increase of highways has accom- 
panied the general improvement of the country ; and during 
the latter part of the period in question, the application of a 
few simple principles has rendered the roads better fitted for 
all kinds of wheel-carriages. From these two causes, the 
means of internal intercourse have been prodigiously in- 
creased, and the modes and rate of travelling greatly changed. 
The method of conveying letters by public coaches, begun in 
1784, was immediately followed by a more expeditious rate 
of travelling, and by an increase in the number of public 
carriages throughout the country. The rate of travelling, 
from being four or five miles in the hour, increased to Six, 


seven, and eight, and now at length to ten, and even twelve.* 


The effect of this change in the rate of travelling has pro- 
duced a corresponding one in the kinds of horses employed. 
The coarse and heavy horses of former times were little fitted 
for this increased exertion, and hence the substitution became 
necessary of a lighter class with superior breeding. The de- 
mand, too, for horses thus employed has been large and con- 
Stant, not only from the numbers employed, but from the 
waste of the animals. Although a class of horses better 
suited for the service than the old has been employed, and 
the stages have been greatly shortened, the burdens could 
not be reduced in proportion to the increase of Speed ; and 
hence the exaction on the muscular powers of the animals 
has been greatly augmented. We may please ourselves with 


* From twenty to thirty miles a-day, at the rate of four miles an hour, was 
the usual work of the few public coaches in England so late as the accession of 
George III. At that period, there was but one public coach from London to 
Kdinburgh, which started once a-month, and occupied nearly three weeks in 
the journey. The other heavy coaches which set off from London performed in 
like manner slow journeys, in the manner of waggons, to distant parts of the 
kingdom. Now, more than 1000 well-equipped carriages, with relays of horses 
at short stages, start from the same great city every day, besides several hun« 
dreds which proceed to the towns, villages, and populous places around, 


600 . THE HORSE. 


the speed and facility with which our journeys are performed, 
but assuredly our convenience is served at the expense of an 
unheard of degree of animal suffering. In no country does 
80 great waste of the lives of horses take place as in England, 
and in no country, it is humiliating to own, is there so much 
cruelty exercised towards these faithful servants. The mor- 
tality of horses in the British Isles is, at least, as three to one, 
as compared with that which exists in any other country in 
Europe. Not only does the general demand for horses of 
all kinds cause them to be employed at an earlier period of 
Jife than in other countries, but the cruel service of these 


public carriages being one in which our finest saddle-horses 


are often doomed to end their lives, a great increase in the 
general mortality is produced. When the powers of our 
saddle-horses begin to fail from age, or when they have met 
with accidents, or have suffered from the effects of diseases, 
they are transferred, in the course of trade, to this their new 
and last employment. How many fine hunters and saddle- 
horses of all kinds, after having rendered their best services 
to successive masters, are forced into this terrible service, 
from which they are never released until they have sunk 
under their tasks ! How many beautiful creatures do we see, 
spavined, greased, foundered, and otherwise lame, whipped 
along in our heavily loaded vehicles, and forced to fulfil tasks 
under which they must shortly perish! Such are the spec- 
tacles that meet our eyes on every highway; such is the 
price paid for our convenience in the sufferings of our help- 
less servants. But in the marvellous progress of invention, 
an agent, by which mechanical is substituted for animal 
power, has been called into action, which, amongst other grea 
changes, seems destined to lighten that mass of suffering 
of which we have been so long the witnesses. 

Not only did the system of public conveyance by coaches call 
forth a lighter and more agile race of horses, but it has acted 
in another way on the saddle-horses of the country. By 
altering the mode of performing journeys, it has diminished 


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LIGHTER CARRIAGE AND SADDLE HORSES. 601 


the inducement to cultivate particular kinds of horses. Few 
persons now make distant journeys on horseback, and are 
willing to travel at the rate of five miles an hour when they 
can be carried forward at the rate of ten or more in common 
coaches, and at the rate of thirty and more by the aid of 
Steam. A horseman with his load of saddlebags is now 
almost as rare a sight as an elephant. <A class of saddle- 
horses, accordingly, formerly used for journeys, has now 
almost disappeared. They were termed RoAD-HORSES, and © 
were suited to their employment. They were strong, useful, 
and safe, but had little or no breeding. Their paces were 
the walk and trot; and the canter and the gallop were nearly 
as much out of place with them as with the cart-horse. The 
CoB, too, a little squat horse fitted for drudgery, is with some 


difficulty to be procured. For the shorter journeys. now in 


use, and for all the usual services of the horseman, animals 
of lighter form and more easy paces are preferred, and few 
habitual riders are satisfied with horses that have not more 
or less of breeding. . 

The OLD ENeLisH Coacu-Horsz may be said to have dis- 
appeared, or rather to be used only for the heavier labours 
of draught. He was a large animal of the cart-horse form, 
usually black, denoting his affinity with the horses of Flan- 
ders, which long supplied England and other countries with. 
this kind of horse. He was round-shouldered and heavy in 
his paces ; but being generally trained in the manner of the 
manége, he had a high and prancing action. His pace was 
the slow trot, and rarely exceeded four or five miles in the 
hour. Some of these horses are still to be seen in the ear- 
riages of the nobility and older gentry of England; but for 
the most part they have given place to animals of far supe-— 


rior breeding and action. The modern Coach-Horse is a very 


different animal from the old. He is a large Horse, having 
a degree of breeding conducive to spirit and action, with the 
strength and bone required for draught. He is greatly used 
in private carriages, as chariots, gigs, and the innumerable 


602 THE HORSE. 


other light and elegant vehicles which are every where to be 
seen. But not only is the modern Coach-Horse largely used, 
but likewise others taken from the various kinds of saddle- 
horses with which the country abounds, from the high-bred 
hunter down through every degree of strength suited to the 
weight of the equipage ; and universally the tendency is to 
use horses of lighter form than were thought suited to the 
heavier carriages and less improved roads of former times. 
This results from the practice long and extensively pursued 
all over Yorkshire and Durham, of breeding horses especially 
for the saddle and the lighter carriages. From this cause 
horses of some breeding become employed in commen labour, 
and the blood of the Race-Horse is insensibly diffused through 
the general mass. 

Of the varieties of Coach-Horses, one in general estima- 
tion for private carriages is the CLEVELAND Bay. It is 
termed Bay, from the prevailing colour, derived from ap- 
proximation to the superior races, and Cleveland, from the 
fertile district of that name situated in the North Riding of - 
Yorkshire on the Tees. About the middle of last century 
this district became known for the breeding of a superior 
class of powerful horses, which, with the gradual disuse of 
the heavy old Coach-Horse, became in request for coaches, 
chariots, and similar carriages. The breed, however, is not 
now confined to the district of Cleveland, but is cultivated 
throughout all the great breeding district of this part of 
England, although Cleveland yet preserves its pre-eminence, 


and supplies with stallions the parts of the kingdom where 


superior Coach-Horses are reared. 

The true Cleveland Bay may be termed a Breed, from the 
similitude of characters presented. by the individuals of the 
stock. It has been formed by the same means as the Hunter, 
namely, by the progressive mixture of the blood of the Race- 
Horse with the original breeds of the country. But a larger 
kind of horse has been used as the basis, and a larger stand- 
ard adopted by the breeder. By coupling a Race-Horse with 


LIGHTER CARRIAGE AND SADDLE HORSES. 603 


& Draught-mare, an animal will be produced partaking of the 
properties of both parents, and which may be employed as a 
Coach-Horge. But the results, as was before observed, of 
such a mixture are uncertain, and the progeny will probably 
be wanting in just proportion of parts. Many Carriage- 
Horses are doubtless produced in this manner, but many of 
them, if their history were told, have been found to be worth- 
less. To rear this class of Horses, the same principles of 
breeding should be applied as.to the rearing of the Race- 
Horse himself. A class of mares, as well as of stallions, 
Should be used having the properties sought for. It is in 
this way only that we can form and perpetuate a true breed 
in which the properties of the parents shall be reproduced in 
their descendants. The district of Cleveland doubtless owed 
the superiority which it continued to maintain in the produc- 
tion of this beautiful race of horses to the possession of a de- — 
finite breed, formed not by accidental mixture, but by conti- 
nued cultivation. 

_ The demand for these Horses has long been very great in 
London and all the more opulent towns of the kingdom, and 
the number carried abroad is large. The English purchasers 
generally require the bay stock ; but the foreign dealers do 
not reject what are called the vulgar colours, and therefore 
carry away many horses which could not be sold in England 
but at a low price. 

Although the Cleveland Bay appears to unite the blood of 
the finer with that of the larger horses of the country, in the 
degree sufficient to combine action with strength, yet modern 
taste has been continually refining upon this form of Coach- 
Horse by adopting a lighter standard. The Cleveland Bay, 
having arrived at a certain degree of breeding, can receive, 
without the violence of too extreme a mixture, a still further 
infusion of the blood of horges nearer to the Race-Horse, 
Many of them are accordingly crossed by Hunters and even 

_ Thoroughbred Horses, and thus another variety of Coach- 
Horse is produced of lighter form and higher breeding ; and, 


604. THE HORSE. 


in truth, many of our superior curricle and four-in-hand 
horses are now nearly thoroughbred. 

A variety of cream-coloured Horses is found in Germany 
suited for the coach. They are valued chiefly for purposes 
of parade and pomp. The cream-coloured breed of Hanover 
was brought to England by George IL, and is reared exclu- 
sively for the Royal stud. The Horses are used only on state 
occasions : they are of noble aspect, but of a soft tempera- 
ment, and unfit for active exercise. 3 

The term HACKNEY, in common use, from the French 
‘ Haquenée, is employed to denote a kind of Horse fitted 
for general services; and is, therefore, understood to ex- 
clude the horses of the highest breeding, as the Thorough- 
bred Horse and Hunter; and there is further associated 
with the idea of a hackney, an animal of moderate size, 
not exceeding fifteen hands, and possessing action, strength, 
and temper. The hackneys of the present day are of lighter 
form than those formerly sought for, and there is greater 
difficulty in obtaining them to suit the services required, 
from our present mixed varieties of half-bred horses, than 
when horsemen were contented with the older class of hack- 
neys of stouter form but inferior breeding. In truth, there 
are few countries in which it is more difficult to obtain what 
may be termed a Hackney than England. The Horses of 
the Ukraine, and generally of the Cossacks of the Don, would 
be invaluable in this country for the purposes for which the 
hackney is valued. The PAurrey of the middle ages was a 
Horse of the lighter kind,.instracted in the paces of the 
manége. The most esteemed of the older Palfreys were the 
Spanish Jennets. At present the term Palfrey is not in 
popular use. It may refer, however, to the smaller class of 
Horses of high breeding, suited especially for ladies. 

The CAVALRY HORSE is selected from the mixed races of 


the country, and has been subjected to the changes which all 


the others have undergone. He has become lighter and 
higher bred, insomuch, that the horses of various regiments 


LIGHTER CARRIAGE AND SADDLE HORSES. 605 


approach the breeding of Hunters. There are regiments, 
indeed, in which a more powerful class of horses is retained, 
but yet these differ greatly from the Heavy Dragoon Horses 
of former times. They have the characters of the modern 
Coach-Horse, and not of the Horse of heavy draught. They 
would have been the pride of the times of chivalry, and 
afford now the example of the most powerful cavalry horses 
that are any where to be found. The memorable field of 
Waterloo shewed their importance. It is known that the 
lighter mounted regiments would have been overborne by 
the heavy armed cavalry of France but for the presence of 
the household troops. On the other hand, the lighter horses 
of our ordinary cavalry have proved themselves fitted, by 
their spirit and endurance, for all the ordinary purposes of . 
the campaign. 

Although the change so widely produced in the horses of 
this country, by aiming at a lighter standard, has doubtless 
given us animals more spirited, active, and graceful, it has, 
at the same time, had the effect of causing great numbers to 
be reared defective in form, deficient in strength and bone, 
and which have lost the hardy qualities of the older races, 
without having arrived at the properties which superior 
breeding should communicate. The deterioration is gene- 
rally admitted, and the causes are deserving of consideration, 
as indicating the remedies. . 

A full account has been already given of the system of 
the modern Course, and the effects have been pointed out of 
the prevalent practice of running short races, ‘with colts not 
yet arrived at sufficient maturity of bone and muscle to fit 
them for the full exercise of their powers. The consequence 
of the system is, that exclusive attention has been directed. 
to the properties of speed, and that the important requisites 
of strength and power of endurance, have come to be re- 
garded as secondary in the cultivation of the animals. Their 
form, suiting itself by insensible degrees to the conditions re- 
quired, a race of surpassing swiftness, but inferior in strength 


606 THE HORSE. 


and bone to the older horses of the turf, has been called into 
existence. Now, as this is the race employed to communi- 
cate its peculiar properties to the others, it is manifest that 
a deterioration of its properties, from whatever cause, is 
calculated to exercise an injurious influence on all the indi- 
viduals with which it is mingled in blood. But yet more 
injurious than the rearing of a race of swift but feeble 
horses, is the constitutional injury inflicted upon the indivi- 
duals of the race by that system of early forcing, with re- 
spect to food and discipline, to which they must be subjected 
at the earliest possible period of life. Hence the mortality 
,; amongst these animals, the strains, the founders, the herniz, 
| and other accidents consequent on over-tension of the parts, 
and all the functional maladies in the respiratory and other 
organs, which a premature and unnatural exertion generates 
in the system, and which, not confined to the individuals, 
descend to the offspring. The evil resulting from these 
causes to the other breeds of the country,.is in proportion to 
the just estimation in which this noble race of horses has 
been hitherto held, and the increasing desire to communicate 


its properties to the inferior races. The remedy might be 
found in determination, rigidly carried into effect, by the in- 
fluential supporters of the turf, to root out the more flagrant 


corruptions which fashion and cupidity have introduced, espe- 
cially with respect to the age at which horses shall be per- 
mitted to run ; or, Should the influence of individuals be in- 
sufficient to effect the necessary reformation, then legislative 
measures should be called for to correct abuses which are no- 
wise essential to the legitimate purposes of the turf, and 
which deprive the country of the benefit which it is entitled 
to derive from a race of horses, brought to a high degree of 
perfection, not by the modern gamblers of the turf, but by 
. the care of former generations. 

Another cause of the deterioration of the horses of the 
country is to be ascribed to errors in breeding, arising chiefly 
from injudicious and extreme mixtures of blood, and in atten- 


LIGHTER CARRIAGE AND SADDLE HORSES. —-607 


tion to the soundness and qualities of the female parents. 
Tt is shewn by experience, that the nearer the characters of 
the parents’ approach, the more likely we are to succeed in 
communicating their common properties to the progeny. By 
extreme crosses good animals may, without doubt, be pro- 
duced, but this will be by a kind of chance, and the greater 
probability is, that the offspring will be defective in some point 
or other. Nothing may seem so easy to the inexperienced | 
- breeder as to produce a splendid coach-horse, or charger, or | 
hunter, by crossing a large cart-mare with a thoroughbred 
horse ; yet how rare are the cages in which the offspring of 
such extreme mixtures is good! Either the body is too large | 
for the limbs, the head too large for the neck, or some other / 
want of harmony of parts presents itself, which renders the / 
animal comparatively worthless. This effect is constantly 
observed in the numerous attempts which are made to pro- 
cure horses of breeding from coarse ungainly mares through 
the means of extreme crogses. Repeated failures are too 
often required to convince the breeder that this is not the 
mode by which well-proportioned animals are to be obtained. 
We may readily produce a fine Ox from animals the most 
‘dissimilar ; but where everything depends, as in the horse, 
upon a nice adjustment of parts, it is rare that the dissimj- 
lar characters of the parents will be so harmonized in the 
offspring as to produce a well-formed individual. The other 
error, still more common, is to disregard the soundness and 
other properties of the mare in breeding. A mare, which is 
good for nothing else, is by too many thought sufficiently 
good for bearing a foal, and hence numbers of worthless ani- 
mals are destined to a purpose for which they are in a pecu- 
liar degree unsuited. Even in such a case, chance may do 
Something for the ignorant and careless breeder; but the 
far greater presumption is, that the offspring will inherit the 
defects of the dam, and prove of little value. 

The remedy for such mistakes is increased intelligence on 
the part both of those who rear horses, and those who ac- 


snatched nian inliaaitliibeli 


608 TIE HORSE. 


quire them. The breeder, by possessing adequate know- 
ledge of the principles of breeding, will avoid the error of 
Anjudicious mixtures of blood, and of employing females for 
breeding which are unsuited for the purpose ; and the con- 


sumer will refuse to purchase animals which are wanting in 
that harmony of conformation, and constitutional soundness, 
without which no horse can be depended upon for perform- 
ing the services required of him. The more palpable defects 
of a large proportion of our mixed class of half-bred horses 
are the want of depth of the chest, the flatness of the sides, 
and the too great apparent length of the limbs. Such horses 


are technically termed Weedy, and they form perhaps the 
worst class of saddle-horses in any country in Europe. They 
have, for the most part, spirit enough, but they are deficient 
in strength and bottom ; and, although they may be easy in 
their paces, they are usually feeble in their limbs, and un- 
safe. Great numbers of these very worthless creatures are 
every year reared and brought to market, which the result 
shews not to be worth half the food they have consumed. 


IV.- HORSES FOR HEAVY DRAUGHT. 


1. THE Oud Exentish Buack Horse.—From early re- 
cords we learn that a race of Horses of a black colour has 
existed in Europe from a remote age. It appears to have 
been the prevailing race of the north of Gaul, and of Ger- 
many from the mouth of the Rhine eastward, having in- 
habited, it may be, in the wild state, the vast regions of 
marsh and forest which stretched all through Europe east- 
ward to the Kuxine Sea. It was well known to the Romans, 
who derived the most powerful horses of their cavalry from 
Belgie Gaul; and when at length, in an evil hour, the Bar- 
barians, as if by a common impulse, poured their swarms into 
southern Europe, then the Great Black Horse of the North 
became an instrument of destruction, and an object of terror ; 


9 


a4 


HORSES FOR HEAVY DRAUGHT. 609 


‘living long in many a legend and tale of blood, and becoming 
associated in the minds of the distracted people with ideas 
of the anger of the gods and the power of demons. It was 
carried into Italy, where its descendants yet exist, and into © 
- Spain, whence it probably passed into Muritania with the 
Vandals. In the middle ages these powerful Horses were 
the steeds of knights and men-at-arms, and are used for 
mounting the heavy cavalry of the great military govern- 
ments of Europe in the present day. . 
The race of the European Black Horse exists unmixed in 
the countries of the Lower Rhine, of the Meuse and the 
‘Scheldt, comprehending the States of Holland and the king- 
dom of Belgium. It is in these countries, as in ancient 
times, that the Black Horse of Europe retains the weight 
and size which were regarded as characteristic of his race. 
But the same stock extends from the Low Countries east- 
ward through central Germany, diverging to the north and 
“South from Switzerland to the Baltic, and exhibiting those 
diversities of size and aspect which differences of food, cli- 
mate, and elevation, tend to produce. Its typical form is 
round and massy, the chest is wide, the neck strong and 
muscular, the limbs are short, stout, and hairy. It possesses 
physical strength and safe action, but is wanting in lightness 
~and speed. It presents every variation of size, from the 
little sturdy German Hackney, to the larger ‘animals suited 
for the waggon and heavier carriages. : 
The same widely-spread race extends into England, where 
_ it presents itself with the same general characters as in the 
ancient countries of the Belgic Gauls, the Batavi, the Fri- 
‘ siandones, and others. It igs found in numbers, from the 
Humber to the Cam, occupying the rich fens of Lincoln and 
Cambridge, and extending westward through the counties of 
Huntingdon, Northampton, Leicester, Nottingham, Derby, 
Warwick, and Stafford, to the Severn: Although most abun- 
dant in these districts of rich pastures, it has extended north- 
ward, and very widely southward, into the countries of the 
2a | 


610 THE HORSE. 


Chalk, retaining the typical characters, but varied with the 
climate, food, and other circumstances affecting its culture 
and condition. In the commons and poorer grounds it pre- 
sents the coarse pack-horse form, distinctive of the greater 
part of the older horses of England. But in the fens and 
richer cultivated country, it attains to the strength and 
stature of the largest horses which the world produces. 

But the older Black Horse of the fens and midland coun- 
ties differs in several respects from the modern cultivated 
race. Few now exist in their original state of rudeness ; 
but scattered individuals are still to be met with, bordering 
on the commons, or in possession of very old farmers, and 
their condition shews the changes which time and cultiva- 
tion have effected. on the race. These older Horses possess 
the bulky form which seems everywhere to characterize the 
-black stock in the countries where rank pastures exist. They 
have coarse heads, large ears, and thick lips, largely garnished 
with hairs. They have coarse shoulders, stout hairy limbs, 
broad hoofs, and short upright pasterns. They are strong, 
of a soft temperament, and eminently deficient in action, 
spirit, and bottom. The first regular attempt which we are- 
informed of to improve this ungainly breed, was made by 
one of the Earls of Huntingdon, who imported. several 
Dutch Coach Stallions, which, with great difficulty, he per- 
suaded his tenants on the Trent to make trial of. Many 
years afterwards Robert Bakewell, of Dishley, in the county 
of Leicester, began to apply those principles of breeding to 
the improvement of the Draught-Horse, which he had adopted 
with unrivalled skill and success in the case of the other 
domestic animals. He acted upon the conviction, that the 
properties of the parents, with respect to both form and tem- 
perament, can be transmitted to the progeny, and rendered 
permanent by continued reproduction. He went himself to 
Holland, and importing several mares, crossed them with 
native stallions ; and pursuing a course of careful selection, he 
formed at length a stock, which he regarded as possessed of 


HORSES FOR HEAVY DRAUGHT. 611 


the properties required. He does not appear to have at- 
tempted any mixture of the blood of horses of high breed- 
ing, but to have confined himself to the kinds suited for slow 
labour. His stock was highly valued, and its descendants 
were preserved with care by succeeding breeders. If the 
figures of some of them do not exhibit what would now be 
regarded as the form of a perfect Draught-Horse, they shew 
the degree of breeding which Bakewell thought sufficient 
to be communicated to horses employed in draught. His 
example was beneficial; and Leicestershire, as well as the 
adjoining counties of Derbyand Stafford, became distinguished 
for the breeding of this class of Horses. 

The modern English Black Horse retains the general 
characteristics of the pre-existing race, but greatly modified. 
His colour is usually a sooty black, with frequently a white 
lozenge-shaped mark on the forehead ; and he has very gene- 
rally one or more of the feet, and part of the legs, and not 
unfrequently the muzzle, white. His body is massive, com- 
pact, and round; his limbs are stout, his chest is enor- 
mously broad, and his neck and back are short. His mane 
is thick and somewhat frizzled, and his legs below the knee 
and hock are hairy down to the heels. His whole aspect con- 
veys the idea of great physical power without corresponding 
action. The main defects of his conformation and tempera- 
ment, are his too great bulk of body, and want of action and 
mettle. For a pull with a heavy weight he is admirable ; 
but he steps out short, and is slow in all his motions. 

These powerful horses are in extensive demand, not only 
in the midland counties, where they are chiefly reared, but 
_ over all the south of England, for the labours of the field, 
and for waggons and heavy carriages of all kinds. They are 
everywhere to be seen, thoving at a slow pace, in the numer- 
ous heavy waggons by which merchandise is conveyed inland, 
and in great numbers in all the larger cities and sea-port 
towns, where they are used for the transport of heavy goods 
at wharfs, for the carriage of coals, timber, building mate- 


612 THE HORSE. 


rials, and for a thousand purposes. In London, where the 
largest and finest are in demand for the carts of brewers, the 
waggons of coal-merchants, and other uses, the stranger 
sees with admiration the vast number of enormous carriages 
in endless motion through the crowded streets, drawn by 
teams of the largest horses in the world: and, doubtless, 
there is something noble in the aspect of these huge creatures, 
yoked in lines, and obedient to the voice, amidst all the tu- 
mult of a great city; but examination shews, that there is an 
excessive waste of power, both in the unnecessary bulk of 
the animals, and in the manner in which their services are 
performed. They are usually attached in lines, which causes 
them to pull by sudden jerks, and with unequal force; and, 
in turning the corners of narrow streets and lanes, it is often 
seen’ that the entire weight of the enormous carriage is 
thrown, for a time, upon the shaft horse. It is contended by 
many, that extreme weight and bulk of body are necessary 
for these horses, to enable them to resist the jolting and sud- 
den obstacles encountered on the rough pavement, which 
they never leave. But, in truth, it is habit, and a species of 
pride, which lead the owners of waggons to prefer the largest 
and most shewy horses to those of moderate size and more 
useful action; for experience cannot but shew, that it is 
muscular force, and not the vis inertie of great weight of 
body, which best enables a horse to overcome continued ob- 
stacles. The mere gratification of taste, however, in the 
employment of these splendid horses, would scarcely re- 
quire a passing censure, were it not that this gratification 
exercises a really hurtful influence in the breeding districts, 
causing attention to be directed to size and appearance, 
rather than to useful properties, and tending to perpetuate 
that unnecessary bulk of body, which constitutes so great 
a defect in the breed. Nor is this influence unimportant in 
degree; for it is to be observed, that the demand for horses 
_of the largest class is not confined to the capital, but extends 
to all the numerous cities and populous towns where drays 


HORSES FOR HEAVY DRAUGHT. 613 


and waggons are in use. When animals of the largest size 
are in demand, and the highest prices aré paid for them, it 
becomes the interest of breeders to employ large stallions, 
and use every means to favour the development of size in 
individuals. In the counties of Lincoln and Cambridge, 
whence the great London drays are chiefly supplied, a breeder 
measures his success by the stature of the individuals which 
he is able to rear. At the age of two years and a half, the 
colts are often seventeen hands high. They are bought at 


this age by graziers near the capital, and used in the light — 


work of the plough until four years old, when they are fit for 
the services to which they are destined, and disposed of at 
high prices. 

_ But the great English Black Horse, with all his existing 
defects of temperament and form, undoubtedly affords the 
basis of a valuable breed of horses, suited to the labour of 
the fields, and heavy draught of every kind. But, in order 
that he may be brought to the degree of improvement of 
which he is capable, sound opinions must prevail regarding 
the properties required in a horse of draught, and the means 
of using his powers. Strength and weight are, doubtless, 
an essential requisite in this class of horses: but the strength 
required is that which is produced by a just conformation of 
parts, and not by mere weight of body. A Draught-Horse 
should, along with the form indicative of physical strength, 
possess length and depth of the posterior extremities, with 
the form of shoulder which ghall allow him to step out freely. 
In these points the English Black Horse is eminently defec- 
tive, and his pace, accordingly, is slower than that perhaps 
of any other horse of the same class in Europe. Neverthe- 
less, a great improvement has recently been effected on the 
breed, which, it is to be trusted, will be progressive. 


I, BREEDS OF THE Nortu-EasterN Countins.—'The 
Black Horse, it has been seen, is widely spread over the 
central and southern counties of England, extending from 


614 THE HORSE. 


Lincolnshire westward and southward. But, on crossing the 
Humber to the north, a change appears in the form and cha- 
racters of the ordinary horses of the country. The black 
gives place to the brown and lighter colours, and the horses 
become less bulky, and of a form more indicative of activity. 
This change appears throughout Yorkshire, Durham, North- 
umberland, and beyond the Tweed, and distinguishes, at a 
glance, the northern breeds of the larger horses from the 
slow and weighty Black Horse of the southern counties. 

~ When we compare the coasts of Britain with those of the 
opposite continent, we find a striking similitude in their 
geological formation, and in their animal and vegetable pro- 
ductions. All along the British Channel, from Land’s End 
to the Straits of Dover, we have a country resembling, even 
to the indentations of the coast, the countries of France from 
Ushant to the Pas de Calais. Bending northward, the flat 
alluvial countries of the eastern coasts of England correspond 
in the closest degree with the low lands of Belgium and Hol- 
land. The marshes of the Zuyder Zee seem to be repro- 
duced in the fens of Lincoln, and in both localities the horses 
resemble one another, even to the colour of the skin. Stretch- 
ing, again, from the Humber northwards, the country in 
England corresponds with the Danish dominions of Holstein, 
Sleswick, and Jutland, and each locality produces horses 
tall and strong, where circumstances favour the.development 
of their forms, of diversified colours, and differing from the 
great horse of the marshes; and we might pursue the paral- 
lel until we reached the granitic mountains of Norway and 
the Scottish Highlands. 

The country from the Tweed to the Humber, forriiing a 
part of the ancient Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Northumberland, 
was early noted for the numbers and quality of its horses. 
The Northumbrians, engaged in incessant forays and wars, 
were distinguished as the most daring horsemen of the 
Island ; and their horses are described as stout, agile, and 
hardy. Durham, although it early became the patrimony of 


HORSES FOR HEAVY DRAUGHT. — 615 © 


St Cuthbert, did not, on this account, become the less war- 
like and predatory; and Yorkshire long retained the sad 
distinction. of being the most frequent arena of the foreign 
and civil wars which desolated the kingdom. The people of 
these countries have retained their ancient passion for the 
Horse; and, in more peaceful times, Yorkshire became a 
nursery for horses, and is now the greatest breeding district 
in England. 

The horses reared in this part of England are of all the 
varieties suited to the saddle, the coach, the waggon, and 
the plough; and present every diversity of size, colour, and 
breeding. It is the peculiarity of the entire district, that 
much of the blood of the superior races has been communi- 
cated to the common kinds, and that comparatively few of 
those employed even in the labour of heavy draught are alto- 
gether unmixed. This results from the practice, long and 
extensively pursued all over Yorkshire and Durham, of 
breeding horses especially for the saddle and the lighter 
carriages. The larger kinds, used solely for draught, are 
chiefly reared in the northern part of the district, of which 
the county of Durham may be regarded as the centre. These, 
when unmixed with the blood of horses of high breeding, are 
a tall and powerful race of animals, adapted to every labour 
requiring weight and muscular force. 


III. Tae CLyDESDALE BREED.—The Horses of Scotland 
employed in labour, pass by gradations from the smaller va- 
rieties of the mountainous districts, to the larger breeds of 
the plains and cultivated country. It is in the Lowlands 
that those adapted for the heavier labours, and properly 
termed Draught-Horses, are reared. Although varying in 
size, form, and properties, in different districts, they have 
been gradually approaching, with the increased means of 
general intercourse, to a greater uniformity of characters. | 
The part of Scotland which had early become the most dis- 
tinguished for the production of the larger horses for draught 


616 THE HORSE. 


was the county of Lanark, otherwise termed Clydesdale. This 
district, intersected in its whole extent by the river Clyde, 
comprehends a large portion of that vast field of coal, to 
which Scotland owes its existence as a manufacturing coun- 
try; and contains within its bounds the city of Glasgow, 
which, from a secondary town, has become, within the period 
of less than a century, one of the most rich and populous 
cities of the empire. The rapid and continuous increase of 
this great manufacturing city, and the prodigious land-car- . 
riage in the rich mining district connected with it, created a 
demand for horses of superior strength and size, for the pur- 
poses of draught. The kind of carriage employed for the 
transport of minerals and all kinds of goods, being the single- 
horse cart, the horses required were those which should com- 
bine with weight of body a considerable degree of muscular 
activity. Those of the district have become, in an eminent 
degree, adapted to the conditions required; and, being inter- 
mixed in blood, and formed on a common model, a breed has 
been produced with well-defined characters. It is termed 
the Clydesdale Breed, because the individuals are mainly 
derived from the district of that name. 

The Clydesdale breed of horses has a manifest affinity 
with the Black Horse of Holiand and the Netherlands; and 
universal tradition refers to an importation, at an early pe- 
riod, of a number of Flanders stallions to the neighbourhood 
of Hamilton, by one of the Dukes of thatname. That a mix- 
ture between the Black Horse of the Continent and the native 
race took place at some period, cannot be doubted ; and there 
is good reason to believe, that the tradition is well founded, 
which refers this national boon to the Noble House of Ha- 
milton, whose extensive. domains embrace the district the 
most early noted for the production of this race of horses. 
But it may likewise be believed, that horses from different 
sources have been, from time to time, introduced into the 
populous mining and manufacturing district of this part of 
Scotland, and that thus the breed of Clydesdale is really of 


HORSES FOR HEAVY DRAUGHT. 617 


very mixed lineage, although its distinctive characters have 
been communicated to it by the blood of the Black Horse. 
The Clydesdale breed of horses, as it now exists, is of the 
larger class, the ordinary stature of the individuals being six- 
teen hands. Their prevailing colour is black, but the brown 
or bay is common, and is continually gaining upon the other, 
and the gray not unfrequently manifests itself although the 
parents should have been dark. They are longer in the body 
than the English Black Horse, and less weighty, compact, 
and muscular; but they step out more freely, and have a 
more useful action for ordinary labour. They draw steadily, 
and are usually free from vice. The long stride character- 
istic of the breed is partly the result of conformation, and 
partly of habit and training ; but, however produced, it adds 


greatly to the usefulness of the horses, both on the road and. 


in the fields. No such loads are known to be drawn at the 
same pace by any horses in the kingdom as in the single- 
horse carts of carriers and others in the west of Scotland ; 


and in the labour of the field these horses are found to com- 


bine activity with the physical strength required for draught. 

The horses of this breed are now reared over all the coun- 
ties of Renfrew, Ayr, and Dumfries, but they are still pro- 
duced in the greatest numbers in Lanarkshire, ‘They have 
fair justice rendered to them when young, by their being 
allowed their natural exercise over a large range of pastur- 


age until the age at which they are taken up for work. <Al-. 


though not pampered, the mares, when in foal, are kept in 
good order by means of turnips, potatoes, and similar food. 
The only kind of horses, too, reared by the farmers being 
those of the native stock, there is no mixture of breeds, and 
little employment of those half-bred mares which are com- 
mon in other breeding districts, On the other hand, the 
rearing of draught-horses being more a part of the regular 
routine of the farm than elsewhere, the farmers are usually 
satisfied to obtain a fair average stock without seeking to 
_ produce horses of superior figure and higher price. Fewer 


epee 


Weaving 
teernnericemenatoemnciniceilie a 


Ae NUE RNS eehecmeRaremoemn 


618 THE HORSE. 


examples of very fine horses may be presented here than in 
other breeding districts, but fewer fall below the standard 
aimed at. 

These horses are disposed of in great numbers at the fairs 
of Glasgow, Rutherglen, and others in the district, and nume- 
rous dealers resort thither from different parts of the king- 
dom to procure them. They are carried largely to Lanca- 
shire, and even to the southern counties of England. They 
are taken in considerable number to the north of Ireland, 
where they are used by carriers and others. They have 
spread over the whole Lowlands of Scotland from Caithness 
to the Solway Firth, and-have been mixed in blood with all 
the other varieties. They are now reared in the eastern as 
well as in the western counties, with more or less of inter- 
mixture with the pre-existing breeds. 

The Clydesdale Horses, although inferior in weight and 
physical strength to the Black Horse, and in figure and 
showy action to the better class of the Draught-Horses of 
Northumberland and Durham, yet possess properties which 
render them exceedingly valuable for all ordinary uses. On 
the roads the individuals perform tasks which can scarcely 
be surpassed, and in the fields they are found to be steady, 
docile, and safe. It is important not only to the district 
which produces them, but to all the others to which they are 
carried, that a due attention be given to a development of 
the useful properties distinctive of the breed. In Clydesdale, 
some breeders apply themselves to the rearing of Stallions, 
and exhibit in their practice the skill and liberality which 
can be desired ; but in the case of the mass of breeders in 
the district, no peculiar energy or skill is exhibited. They 
are often too easily contented with cheap and inferior mares, 
and not always sufficiently aware of the importance of em- 
ploying stallions of the first class. 


IV. Tue Surrotk Puncn Breup.—Besides the heavy 
Black Horse, and the other larger horses of the country em- 


HORSES FOR HEAVY DRAUGHT. 619 


ployed in draught, a variety exists possessed of such peculia- 
rities of formand colour, that it is properly regarded as a | 


family or breed. Itis termed the Suffolk Punch Breed, from ) 
the county of Suffolk, where it has been long reared, and from | 
the stout or punchy form distinctive of the individuals. It ex- ‘ 


tends from Suffolk throughout the neighbouring counties of 
Norfolk and Essex, where it is held in estimation for the pur- 


poses of common labour. It is distinguished by its colour, |_— 


which is of a light dun or sorrel, sometimes deepening into 
chestnut, with lighter coloured mane and tail. It was held to 
be a useful kind of horse, naturally of moderate stature, and 
though slow, possessed of good endurance. But for a long 
period the breed has been largely crossed with other varieties, 
So that it is now somewhat difficult to obtain the Suffolk Punch - 
in a state of purity. The older breed was especially valued 
for the steadiness of the individuals in draught, and the true- 
ness with which they performed their work of all kinds. No 
horses exerted themselves better at a dead pull. <A true 
- Suffolk Punch would draw almost till he dropped down. A 
team, at a signal given, would, without a whip, bend in a 
moment to their knees, and drag everything along.* This 
property was so remarkable in the old Suffolk Punches, that 
cruel wagers used to be laid on their powers of draught, and 
many fine horses, it is said, were ruined by their indomitable 
spirit. They were, besides, a hardy race of horses, capable 
of subsisting on ordinary food. Their form, however, was 
peculiarly plain. The heads were large, the necks short, the 
muzzles coarse, the shoulders low and cloddy; but the limbs 
were short, the backs straight, the loins wide, and the haunches 
well developed. The colour distinctive of this variety con- 
nects it with the race widely diffused throughout the north 
of Europe and Asia, from the Scandinavian Alps to. the 
plains of Tartary, in which the dun colour prevails. It is 
believed to have been carried to the eastern counties of Eng- 


* ‘Library of Useful Knowledge. 


| 


easement 


a 
neg 


AD CTE ae RTA ce ARS A ase ee ean 
alte 


prin ieee entrap 


RR PF oo 


P xcedrirs 


yA 


1S ANP CR NEP ROHR ne 


mann cecerinentnnetitintoenain toners 


Fe I 


Peeve ntm oti 


620 THE HORSE. | 


land from Normandy, which yet possesses many fine horses 
of this variety, introduced, it may be believed, by the Scan- 
dinavian invaders. 

The Suffolk Punch breed of ngkinads it has been said, has 
been crossed with other varieties. These are chiefly the 
larger horses of Yorkshire and Durham. By this mixture 
individuals have been improved in figure and action, but that 
uniformity of the breed, which enabled the breeder to repro- 
duce with certainty the characters of the parents in the pro- 
geny, has been to a certain degree taken away, with some- 
thing, too, of the hardiness and peculiar temperament of the 
older family. Fashion and taste have had more to do with 
this change than considerations of utility. The dun colour 
is in less request than the darker brown or bay, although the 
former is characteristic of the hardiest breeds of horses in 
Hurope. Of recent years a considerable demand has arisen 
for Suffolk Punches, for the purposes of the dray and wag- 
gon. Many fine teams of this variety are to be seen in Lon- 
don, where, amid the tumult of the crowded streets, the © 
massy forms and bright manes and tails of the horses pre- 
sent a striking appearance. The modern Suffolk Punch is 
certainly superior to the Black Horse in activity and endur- 
ance, and is at least equally well suited to the continued ser- 
vices of the dray ; but the demand for large horses has the 
_ effect, as in the case of the Black Horse, of inducing atten- 
tion to size rather than the useful properties. Sometimes 
the Suffolk Punch: has been crossed with horses of high 
breeding. In this way good horses may occasionally be pro- 
duced adapted to the chariot and coach ; but unless a breed 
. were formed, as in Cleveland, by progressive intermixture, 
no permanent supply of superior horses could be calculated 
upon from this source. 


Other varieties of the larger horses suited for labour exist 
in different parts of England, but, for the most part, they are 


either of too mixed and varying characters to be regarded as 


HORSES FOR HEAVY DRAUGHT. 621 


bee 


breeds, or too few in numbers to be of economical interest 
beyond the districts which produce them. When unmixed 
they are often merely the older pack-horses, somewhat en- 
larged in size, and presenting the varieties in colour and 
form which these native horses have possessed for an unknown 


period. In Cornwall and the higher parts of Devonshire, 


Wiltshire, and elsewhere, low sturdy horses are in common 
use, which are active and useful beyond what their external 
appearance would indicate. The lower parts of Wales, in 
like manner, produce horses of moderate stature and ordinary 
form, but which are hardy and true to their work; and the 
same remark will apply to a great part of the horses of the 
districts bordering on Wales. Northward through Lanca- 
shire, we find horses of a mixed breed, generally inferior in 
figure to those of the eastern counties, but stout and well 
adapted for common labour. In Cumberland, many good’ 
horses are produced, which may be regarded as related in 
- part to the Durham breed, and in part to the Clydesdale 
breed of Scotland. 


A NY Pt pny mg 


PN RT RENE 


me nea ant it til a cA tan i cen mse aR eit ki Leena mg ne ne te 


TAOMESQN 


SCOTTISH DEER-HOUND, 


VI. THE DOG. 


The DoG, reduced to servitude from the earliest civiliza- 
tion of our race, forms, nevertheless, a member of a group of 
beasts of prey, whose common characters unite them into a 
family or tribe. The Canide are spread over every region 
of the habitable earth ; and are all fitted to live on flesh, al- 
though they may subsist on vegetable food, and, in the do- 
mesticated state, are sometimes fed entirely upon it. They 
are mostly swift of foot, and endowed with a delicate sense 
of animal odours, which enables them to pursue the traces of 
their prey. They are either gregarious, living in packs and 


o 


REI  eerapmenr 


HISTORY. eat 623 


combining their forces to captivate their victims, or else 
they are more or less solitary, remaining in pairs during the 
Season of sexual desire, or while they have their young to 
defend. They have not generally the same thirst of blood as 
the feline tribes, although, when urged by their wants, they 
are bold, voracious, and dangerous. They do not possess 
the agility and suppleness of body for which the feline tribes 
are distinguished ; but they are more enduring of fatigue, 
more wary, sagacious, and patient, and many of them are 
furnished with temperaments which cause them to resign 
readily their natural habits, and live under new conditions : 3 
of life. Judging from organic remains, the Canide do not | 
seem to have been called into existence on this planet at the 

very earliest periods, but to have succeeded, in the order of 

time, most of the more sanguinary carnivora. They are the 
instinctive and most powerful enemies of the feline tribes, 
killing not only their cubs in great numbers, but being fre- 
quently enabled, by their union, sagacity, and power of smell, 

to hunt them down. | 

Connected by certain relations with the Dog is the vora- 
cious family of Hysnas, which earlier naturalists compre- 
hended in the same genus. But the Hyenas, although some 
_ of them approach very near to the conformation of the Dog, 
possess habitudes and characters different from the true Ca- 
nide, and are regarded as forming a distinct group. While = | 
at one point they pass into the Dogs, at another they are € 
connected with the Civet tribe. 

Of the Hysenas, the most numerous are the Spotted and 
the Striped ; the former inhabiting Southern Africa, and the 
latter the countries north of the great Sahara, extending 
through Arabia, Syria, Asia Minor, and other warm parts 
of Asia, to the forests beyond the Ganges. In a former age | 
of the world, the family, although of species now extinct, 
extended even to the higher latitudes of Europe, and 
have left their remains in rocky caverns and mineral de- a tt i] 
posites, | 


A OEE Ne NR PE NPP EINE NER: 


at RA RE PRR ee ERI - . 


624 THE DOG. 


The Hyena is of Savage aspect, and ungainly form. Like 
the Wolf, his eyes glare in the dark. Many of the ancient 
nations regarded him with a kind of terror. They held him 
to be possessed of magical powers, so as to be capable of 
imitating the human voice, of changing his own sex, of 
charming the senses, and riveting the beholders to the spot 
where they stood. The head of the Hyzena is large; his neck 
is rigid, which gave rise to the ancient fable that it was of one 
bone ; and his jaws being moved by powerful muscles, the ani- 
mal is enabled to bite with tremendous force, and crush the 
bones of his victims in an instant. The Hyeenas live in holes. 
and caverns, and issue forth under the cloud of night, prowling 
in troops, and uttering frightful and mournful cries. With 
the exception of one species, the Cape Hunting Hyena, they 
are little fitted for pursuit, but steal upon the largest ani- 
mals, as the bullock, the ass, the horse, and the camel, and, 
entering the sheep-folds, commit frightful havoe upon the 
unresisting flock. They feed largely on garbage, and the 
putrifying flesh of animals, which they seem to prefer to 
other food. They skulk into towns and villages in the dark, 
and, with the vultures and outcast dogs, assist in clearing 
away the filth and offal which the habits of Africans and 
Asiatics allow to accumulate around their dwellings; and 
entering the churchyards, they dig up the bodies of the dead. 
They abound in the warmer regions of the Old Continent, 
but are most numerous in Africa. They are so abundant in 
Abyssinia, according to Bruce, that they are regarded as a 
general scourge in every situation, both in the city and in 
the field ; “ and I think,” continues the traveller, “ surpassed 
the sheep in number. Gondar was full of them from even- 
ing till the dawn of day, seeking the different pieces of 
slaughtered carcasses which this cruel and unclean people 
expose in the streets without burial.’? Although bold and 
savage in claiming the food which their appetites require, 
yet they are rarely dangerous to man. The Moors of Bar- 
bary are in the habit of entering the cavern in which a 


2 


acietene ene 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 625 


Hyzna has concealed himself with a burning torch, throw- 
ing a blanket over his head, and tying his feet, as if he were 


a calf; and the people in the Moorish towns, when they — 


meet hyzenas in the streets, will frequently, we are told, pull 
them by the ears in sport, without their offermg any other 
resistance than to pull back. Fierce and ravenous as these 
animals are when prowling for their prey, they are yet ca- 
pable of domestication, and become as submissive as a dog. 
But they pine and fret under a deprivation of liberty, and 
when chained or confined in a cell like wild beasts, preserve 
the fierceness and indocility distinctive of their rudest condi- 
tion. The Hyznas certainly approach very near, in certain 


characters, to the Dog; and it is just possible, that the blood of * ‘ 


this rude and ravenous creature may have been mingled with 
that of certain domesticated breeds. It is said that the Dogs 
of some of the African tribes have much of the aspect of this 


animal; and even in our own country, we sometimes see, in / 


the case of the larger dogs fed on the garbage of shambles, 


‘Something like an approach to the marking of the fur, the ex- 


pression of the eyes, and general appearance, of these animals. 

But the true Canide are certain Species of Dogs which exist 
in the Old and New Continents, including, 1s¢, the Wolves, the 
Jackals, and Foxes, so called; 2dly, various Species of Wild 
Dogs, which approach more or less to the typical forms of 
the Wolf, the Jackal, and the Fox, and which might, doubt- 
less, were our knowledge of them sufficiently precise, be in- 
cluded in one or other of these generic forms; and, 3dly, the 
Fennecs, or Zerdas, little animals of the Dog kind, inhabit- 
ing the African Continent. 

Of these animals, the Wolf is that which, from his num- 
bers, and the terrible ravages which his sanguinary appetites, 
his hardihood, and surpassing Sagacity, have enabled him 
to inflict on other animals, has excited the sreatest interest, 
and, in every age, been placed in a painful relation with the 


ruder as well as the more civilized inhabitants of countries. — 


His howlings in the dead of night, or when the moon shines 
2k 


« 


| 
iH 
Be 


f 


626 THE DOG. 


forth, the glaring of his eye, his mysterious crossing of the 
path of the lonely traveller, the pertinacity with which he 
tracks the steps of his human victim, and even enters his 
dwelling, have in all ages tended to excite ideas of a myste- 
rious power, and notions which yet find a place in the super- 
stition of the vulgar of different countries. Even the terror 
which this creature has inspired, has rendered him the object 
of preposterous adoration. He was held sacred to Apollo, 
whom a she-wolf suckled, and to other fabled divinities of the 
first ages. Under the gloomy superstition of the Scandina- 
vian nations, he was regarded as a type of the destroying 
demon, who was to appear at that terrible epoch when even 
the Gods should perish. More often he was held to be typical 
of noble daring, ever the first of virtues amongst barbarians. 
He was an attendant upon Odin, in the gloomy Shades of the 
northern nations, as on Mars, in the fairer Heaven of the 
Olympic Gods. He suckled the founders of the Roman 
state, and gave cognominations to the noblest families of 
Greece and Rome. But it is chiefly amongst the Teutonic 
nations that we find the Wolf associated with the memory 
of great actions; and giving names to nations, tribes, and 
warlike leaders. 

The Common Wolf, Lupus vulgaris, the most numerous of 
the species, inhabits all Europe, from the Icy Cape to the 
shores of the Mediterranean. He is found, too, in all North- 
ern and Central Asia, extending through the wilds of Siberia 
to the shores of Kamtschatka. He is found in the countries 
of the Caucasus, and all along the Himalayas; and, by ana- 


logy, he may be believed to occupy all the higher ranges in 


contact with that mighty mass of mountains. Stretching 
along the secondary chains, he appears in the plains of In- 
dia, and beyond the Brahmapootra. His limits in the African 
Continent are unknown; but it is believed that he exists 
from Morocco eastward to the Libyan deserts, and even that 
he extends to the high land of Abyssinia, and the mountains 
stretching inland. In the New World, he is found from 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 627 


Behring’s Straits, by Baffin’s Bay, to the desolate shores of 


Greenland ; and he extends through all the wilds of North 


America, to the narrow isthmus which separates the Pacific 
from the Caribbean Sea. 

Within these vast limits, it may well be inferred that the 
Wolf has assumed characters which fit him for the varied 
conditions in which he must exist, with respect to place, cli- 


mate, and the nature and abundance of his prey. According- | 


ly, he is often found go changed in colour, form, and gene- 
ral aspect, that naturalists remain in doubt whether certain 
wolves are to be regarded as distinct from one another, or 


varieties of the same specific form. Of these there are two, | 


which naturalists generally regard as distinct species,—the 
Black Wolf, and the Dusky Wolf. . 

The Black Wolf, Lupus Lycaon, is sometimes termed the 
Pyrenean Wolf, from his being the prevailing kind of that 
lofty chain; but he inhabits other mountainous parts of 
Southern Europe, and appears to extend to the countries 
of the Arctic Ocean. He re-appears, likewise, of the same 
or nearly allied species, in the New World, stretching from 
_ the Arctic Circle into Florida. He has muscular limbs, and 
a Shaggy coat, and is more like a dog than even the Com- 
mon Wolf; and, indeed, so much resembles the Dogs of some 
countries of Europe, that, to the eye, he appears to be the 
same. The Dark or Dusky Wolf (Lupus nubilus, Willd.) in- 
habits likewise the high latitudes of both continents, but has 
Searcely the same claim to be regarded. as a distinct species 
as the Black Pyrenean Wolf; and, in truth, neither differs 
so much from the Common Wolf as others which are regarded 
as varieties. 

The Common Wolf, which may be regarded as the type of 
the group, is about the size of the larger class of the domes- 
ticated dogs. But he is longer in the body than they: his 
limbs are stouter, the ball of the foot is more hairy, and the 
claws are larger. The incisor teeth are more projecting, 
and his canines more trenchant and strong. His eyes, which 


2 RTT 


Sn asntrtnsinecinntinresitisnshenih nes 


LA SER Fe 


mat et 


628 “THE DOG. 


in the dark glisten like globes of fire, are smaller, and, being 
placed more obliquely, give to the animal that cunning and 


sinister aspect which has been so often commented upon. 
His face is broader above the eyes than in the domesticated 
Dogs; and his ears are shorter and more erect. His 
muzzle, which he uses in place of his feet for making holes 
in the ground for hiding his prey, is narrow, and the edges 
of his lips are black. His tail is bushy and pendent, and is 
rarely curled upwards, in the manner of the commen dogs, 
except for a moment when he is at play. His skin emits 
a strong odour, his hair is coarse, and he is furnished with 
a bristly mane, which he erects when in anger. His voice 
ig a dismal howl, although, when tamed, he readily learns 
to imitate the barking of the common dog. In the higher 
latitudes, his fur is usually a fulvous-gray; and in the Arc- 
tic regions, it often becomes as white as that of the Polar 
Bear. In the very highest latitudes, too, his body is stouter 
/than elsewhere, his feet are more webbed, and his habits 
_ more aquatic, so that he can cross from land to land, and 
} pursue seals and other prey even in the water. Towards 
the temperate latitudes, his fur becomes more fulvous, and 
in the warmer, it deepens even to a russet-brown; and in 
countries of great cold, it is more shaggy than in those which 
are temperate. In elevated countries, destitute of trees, he 
has longer limbs, and is more swift of foot, than in woody 
plains where his prey is abundant; and, in short, there is 
no animal which presents, in the state of nature, greater va- 
'viations than the Wolf. Hunters are aware of these differ- 
‘ ences, and distinguish the wolves of different parts of the 
same country. Even in the same litter, individuals are pro- 
duced, so different in form and colour, that naturalists some- 
times suppose them to be of distinct species. 

The season of heat of the female is in autumn, and she 
goes with young about sixty-three days, which is the medium 
period of gestation of the Dog; but far otherwise than in 
the case of dogs, the male and female wolf retire apart to 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 629 


Some secret covert, and when the time of parturition arrives, 
select some fitting place, as a hole in the earth, a crevice of 
a rock, or even a hollow tree, and prepare a bed with soft 
moss, which the female lines with the fur of her own body, 
which at that season is easily detached. The cubs, like all 
other dogs, are born blind, and remain so for ten or twelve 
days. During this period, ere light has dawned on the eyes 
of the young, the male, it is said, seeks to destroy them. The 
fact is questionable ; but if it were true, it would not be with- 
out parallel, as in the case of the Wild Hog, the Rabbit, and 
other animals, to whom this remarkable instinct is given. 
But whatever the truth be with respect to the Wolf, the pa- 
rents, it is well known, combine their cares to rear their 
young. The male pursues the chase, and brings food to his 
mate when suckling her whelps. When the young can eat 
of solid food, both parents busy themselves in obtaining it, 
the one keeping watch while the other is absent, and ready 
to die rather than abandon the charge. It is said that they 
bring to their hole little animals alive, as leverets, moles, and 
even mice, which-they teach the young to kill. After a time 
the whelps are led forth, and taught by the parents to worry, 
to run, to follow the smaller animals, and even, it is said, to 
bear pain without flinching. The lessons being concluded, 
the male assumes the independent habits proper to him; but 
the female retains the whelps near her for a riienieibie time 
to defend them, until at length, in obedience to the instincts 
which are given her, she quits her long-cherished offspring, 
that they may perform the functions proper to them. 

The habits of the Wolf have been again and again de- 
scribed. His appetite for food seems to be insatiable, and 
his craving for it incessant. The tiger, when he has devoured 
the flesh, and lapped the blood, of his victim, lays himself 
down to repose in his lonely lair: the wolf seems to know no 
pause in his work of havoe; except that, like every carnivor- 
ous quadruped, he casi a long period of sleep to repair 
the wants of the system. This sleep he takes during the day 


soeliememnenimeinen nace ace eae ET NA SOE lime ee tener eee 


ere 


630 THE DOG. 


from dawn to sunset, but may be roused at once from his per- 
turbed and sullen slumber by the ‘calls of hunger, and then 
he is as fierce and insatiable as during the night. When 
prey is abundant, he contents himself with devouring the 
most savoury parts, but when it is Scarce, he buries the 
flesh under ground, and returns again and again, in silence 
and alone, to feed. When prowling in the dark, he guf- 
fers no creature which comes within his grasp to escape 
with life ; for instinct, it appears, instructs him to kill even 
though he should be unable to devour. The Wolf is thus 
the terror of the weaker animals; and even the strongest 
and fleetest do not escape him. Yet he is rather ferocious 
and cunning than truly daring, except when urged by hun- 
ger, and then no danger seems to appal him. But he gene- 
rally seeks to circumvent rather than make a direct attack on 
animals able to resist him. He crouches on the ground, and 
avails himself of every cover, or sinuosity of the surface, to 
take his victim unprepared. When the sentinels of armies 
are placed in woods where wolves abound, they are often de- 
stroyed ere the alarm can be given, or help afforded. The 
wolves, lurking and concealed around, watch in silence every 
motion of the man, and in an instant, when he turns his 
back, or is off his guard, spring upon him and tear him to 
pieces. In India the young villagers, when employed in 
ploughing or other labours of the field, are not unfrequently 
carried off by the wolves of the neighbouring jungles. The 
animals, skulking in the hollows of the ground, and availing 
themselves of every bush, approach unseen, and, when the 
back of the victim is for a moment turned, spring upon 


him. In this manner, a few years ago, near a particular 


village in India, more than a dozen of poor boys were carried 
off in quick succession during the period of the active labours 
of the season. The pertinacity with which a wolf will watch 
and pursue his solitary victim is wonderful. He will follow 
him for mile after mile, crouching and’ concealing himself. 
During the long continued snow in 1845, the French Jour- 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. * 631 


nals inform us, that, as a publie diligence was passing along 
the road, the conductor heard the loud cries of a man for 
assistance. The man stated that he had been for some time 
followed by a wolf, which he had had the utmost difficulty in 
keeping off. The man was taken into the diligence, and car- 
ried on for ten or twelve miles. He then got out to pursue 
the rest of his journey on foot, but he had scarcely left the 
vehicle when the passengers were again alarmed by-his cries - 
for assistance. The insatiable wolf, it appears, was once 
more by his side. But generally, when wolves have enemies - 
capable of resisting their attack, they assemble in bands. — 
When the Spanish shepherds, aided by innumerable dogs, 
are conveying their great flocks of sheep from the southern 
to the northern provinces, the wolves prowl in the distance 
all around, prepared to take every opportunity to seize upon 
the stragglers. The muleteers of the same country, when 
crossing the defiles of the Pyrenees, as night approaches: 
have sometimes difficulty in saving the mules from the fero- 
city of these enemies. The wolves are to be seen in the dusk, 
stealing from bush to bush as the cavaleade moves on, ready 
to spring upon the first unguarded mule. In the progress of 
armies through wild countries, wolves are often seen to fol- 
low their march in bands, ready to seize the straggling horses 
and other animals, and to feast, it must be believed, on the 
bodies of the wounded and dying. In the memorable re- 
treat of the French from Moscow, the northern wolves 
continually hung in the rear of the two armies. Many of 
them, of a more shaggy and ferocious aspect than had before 
been seen in the same parts, reached the banks of the Rhine, 
and were killed by the country people. When wolves are 
pressed by long famine, they not unfrequently combine in — 
large numbers to enter the neighbouring hamlets and vil- 
lages. The pack rushing suddenly in, tear to pieces the do- 
mestic dogs, and, entering the outhouses, kill every animal 
they meet. Sometimes even they force themselves-into dwell- 
ing-houses, and spring upon the people. 


* i 
Dep gl es Ka aa 
se = —SSSS 


ee RR OE 


632 THE DOG. 


When wolves have by any means learned to feed on human 
flesh, they ever afterwards make increased efforts to obtain 
it. In India, where the heat of the climate causes the na- 
tives to sleep much in the open air, they are often the vic- 
tims of these midnight prowlers. But the animals rather 
attack children than those who can offer resistance. They 
have been known to spring upon women when suckling their 
children, and carry away the babes, amid the cries, the mis- 
siles, and unavailing pursuit of the throng; and yet the 
wolves of India are nothing like so powerful as those of the 
higher latitudes, but being in a populous country, they have 
learned to attack men, whom in other localities they would 
not have dared to face. | 


Wolves are less gregarious than many others of the canine 


family. They rather assemble together than live in commu- 
nities. They are enduring, and pertinacious in pursuit, fol- 
lowing their game by the scent as well as by the eye. A 
single wolf has been known to run down a Stag orelk. They 
are sometimes seen hunting in little packs, which, when the 
quarry is in view, divide into sets, some following behind, and 
others keeping in flank to intercept the bewildered victim, 
as he vainly strives to save himself by turning to one or 
other side. 

When the Wolf invades the cultivated country, he becomes 
the scourge of the inhabitants. For the most part he easily 
subdues the domesticated dogs, whom he maims by snapping 
at their limbs, which he frequently breaks, so that few even 


of the largest. and fiercest dogs willingly encounter him. It 


is said that he has the art of luring house-dogs from their 
stations, in order that he may turn upon them. When he 
attacks a sheep, he either devours it on the spot, or, throw- 
ing it over his shoulder that he may the more easily support 
its weight, drags it away. But, generally, he does not limit 
himself to a single victim in the case of such animals as the 
sheep, but endeavours to destroy as many as he can; and it is 
remarkable that this is the very practice of the domesticated 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 633 


dog when he has by any chance acquired the habit of run- 
ning down sheep. When the wolf enters a sheep-fold, which 
he does by leaping over the walls, or digging underneath 
them, the havoc he commits is excessive. If time be allowed 
before the alarm is given, he frequently does not depart while 
a single animal is alive, but flies from one to another, as if 
his appetite for slaughter increased with the means of grati- 
fying it. Sometimes, indeed, in mountainous countries, the 
rams, placing the females in the rear, present a front to the 
wolf, and endeavour to rush upon him with their powerful 
foreheads, and stun him by the shock. But the hazard is, that 
the marshalled ranks will be thrown into instant confusion, 
when nothing but the appearance of the shepherd with fire- 
arms, or his faithful but terrified dogs, can save the remnant 
- of the flock. When a wolf advances to a herd of oxen, they 
assemble in a mass, and endeavour to trample him with their 
feet, an instinct which even the helpless oxen of our fields 
retain, as we may see when a strange dog intrudes into their 
pasture grounds. But the Wolf never assails a whole herd 
of these animals. He seeks to surprise the scattered mem- 
bers, and then he runs at them from behind, and hamstrings 
them by his powerful bite ; and it is curious that the larger 
drover’s dogs in this country imitate, without inflicting 
wounds, the same mode of attack. When the Wolf assails a 
horse, he adopts a different practice : he avoids both the pos- 
terior limbs and fore-feet of the animal, and endeavours to 
spring upon his back, or seize him high up by the buttocks. 
The Wolf, wary by nature, hag all his habits of caution 
increased when brought into contact with man. When he 
Sets forth from his covert, when the shades of evening have 
fallen, he snuffs the gale to windward, that he may know 
whether an enemy is in the distance. When he steals into the 
neighbouring country in search of food, he sometimes effaces 
the marks of his footsteps by his bushy tail, that the retreat 
from which he has issued may not be discovered ; and when 
Several wolves go forth in company, they frequently follow 


634 THE DOG. 


one another, step by step, so that not more than one mark may 
be made, and this to be effaced by the last of the file. When 
a wolf, alone or along with others, approaches an outhouse 
or other place where he looks for prey, and finds that it can- 
not be entered with safety, he abandons for the present his 
design. When the practice is adopted of laying poisoned 
carrion in the woods, he suspects the food of dead animals 
which he meets with in the same situations, and, though 
famishing, will abstain from the dangerous lure. He knows 
the effect of fire-arms, and takes the means to keep without 
their range. 

He is often hunted by hounds trained to the chase ; but 
no other animal is with such difficulty run down. When 
forced from his covert in the forest, he boldly strikes off for 
the next place of safety, though often at a vast distance, en- 
deavouring to gain time, and put the hounds at fault by 
bounding from the direct path, by entering pools of water, 
nay, by crossing the widest rivers, as the Rhine, and swim- 
ming down to a distance with the current. But should he 
be unable to reach a place of safety, so that the hounds gain 
upon him, he turns back for an instant, snaps at the limbs 
of the foremost dogs, so that he may maim them, and then 
continues his retreat. 

When Europe was almost one continued forest, the wolves 
were the subject of continued dread to the inhabitants. Every 
one is aware of the many allusions in the pages of the classic 
poets to the ravages of the wolf on the flocks and herds of the 
southern shepherds. But the northern nations were more 
subjected to the depredations of this animal, from the greater 
extent of their forests. With the progress of settlement and 
cultivation, the wolves of Europe progressively diminished 
in numbers, but this only by the use of fire-arms, and by in- 
cessant persecution carried on from age to age. But even 
yet, wolves are in many parts of Europe so numerous as to be 


troublesome and dangerous, as in the Pyrenees, and yet more 


in the countries where large forests exist, as in Poland and 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 635 


Russia, where the depredations committed are often exceed- 
ingly great. By an official report made to the Russian Go- 
vernment in 1822, it appears that in one year there were 


killed in the province of Livonia, 1841 horses, 1807. oxen, © 


733 calves, 15,182 sheep, 726 lambs, 2545 goats, 183 kids, 
4190 swine, 312 young pigs, 703 dogs, 673 geese, and 1243 
other fowls. In England, wolves so abounded at one period as 
to make it dangerous to pass through the woods after sunset 
even for the shortest distance. In the ancient forests of 
Kent, and in those surrounding London, they so swarmed 
that no animal kept about human dwellings was safe; and 
one of the early cares of the Anglo-Saxon princes was to 
adopt public measures for their destruction, to which end 
many remarkable laws and edicts are recorded. They con- 
tinued, however, numerous during the reign of the Tudor 
Princes, and were only exterminated at length by the gene- 
ral use of fire-arms, and by the destruction of nearly all the 
noble forests which once covered the country. The last wolf 
of Scotland, we are informed, was killed in the wilds of Loch- 
aber, by Sir Ewan Cameron of Lochiel, in the year 1680 ; 
and the last for which the statutory recompense was claimed 
in Ireland, was in 1710. 

From the terrible ravages committed by this creature, and 
the indomitable ferocity which he manifests, he has been in 
every age loaded, as it were, with malediction and reproach. 
His treachery, malignity, and. unsparing cruelty, have been 
the subject of popular outcry, as well as the theme of learned 
writings. His skulking gait, the odour which exudes from his 
skin, the very expression of his countenance, have been com- 
mented upon as something to make him loathed; nay, he has 
been held to be typical of the worst passions which we can 
fancy to exist in our own species. But do we forget that this 


animal is a member of that marvellous system of organized 


forms of which we ourselves are but a part, and that faculties 
have been assigned to him, which consist with the purposes 
he has to fulfil? Destruction keeps pace with existence, 


636 THE DOG. 


else so many living forms could not enjoy the brief pericd 
allotted to them for sensation and thought; and even our own 
Species is ordained to be an instrument for depriving ani- 
mals of life. The Wolf, indeed, is one of the most destruc- 
tive beasts of prey which the northern hemisphere of the 
world produces. No animal is gifted with such powers of 
destruction as he. Even the victims of the tiger are trifling 
in number when compared with those which are continually 
sacrificed to that craving for food, which, in the Wolf, no- 
thing seems to satiate. But we must remember that but 
for these wild and sanguinary dogs, other species would 
multiply not less noxious, as the lynxes and other tribes of 
felide, which once occupied the same regions: and no other 
creature seems to have been so well fitted as the Wolf, by 
his combined powers of scent and speed, his strength, his 
hardihood, and his matchless sagacity, to restrain within the 
fitting limits his fellow carnivora. 

Fierce and indomitable as we esteem the Wolf to be, yet 
even in his rudest condition, we may discern the germ of 
faculties and affections, which should save him from the ob- 
loquy with which he is loaded. We have seen the fidelity 
with which he assists his mate in rearing their common 
young, the tenderness with which both parents provide for 
the safety of their offspring amidst the mass of dangers 
which surround them, and the courage with which they pro- 
tect them. Even when the adult wolf is taken in a trap or 
pitfall, and imprisoned in a cell, deprived of all the freedom 
of action which he had till then enjoyed, and reduced to a 
miserable captivity, in the midst of animals the most hate- 
ful to him, we yet find him submitting himself like a spaniel 
to his keepers, and manifesting an enduring attachment to 
those who treat him with kindness. And not only is this 
docility of temper shewn towards persons who tend and feed 
him, and who thus acquire that kind of ascendancy which 
the fiercest animals submit to, but it is manifested in the 


case even of strangers only casually known to him. A she- 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 637 


wolf, we are informed, in one of the London Menageries, 
was in use to manifest unbounded joy whenever a young 
lady, who sometimes visited the collection, made her appear- 
ance within.* What chords of feeling had been touched we 
know not: probably the mere expression of kindness, as evin- 
ced by looks and gentle words, had sufficed to win the gra- 
titude of the captive. And such examples are the more to 
be noted, as they occur when the animal is subjected to 
conditions of life far foreign to his habits, and fretted by 
hopeless captivity. It is known that even the gentlest dog 
may be rendered vicious by being deprived of liberty; and 
that the mastiff, continually chained, becomes too furious 
to be approached. In those menageries, where the young 
wolves are reared with some care, and accustomed to be ap- 
proached like common dogs, they séem to receive the utmost 
delight from being touched and patted. They will rub them- 
selves on the legs of the person who notices them, lie down, 
and, looking fondly in his face, implore him, as it were, to 
continue his caresses. M. Frederick Cuvier mentions the 


_ case of a she-wolf in the Parisian Menagerie, which evinced 


more of sensibility than the most faithful dog would have 
done. At the least word expressed with kindness, at the 
least sign of encouragement, she would press against: you, 
turn in all manner of ways as if to touch you better, and 
send forth a soft and plaintive cry expressive of the pleasure 
She felt. 
Should the Wolf, instead of being enslaved and imprisoned, 
be reared up from infancy like the dogs of the household, he 
becomes as tame and familiar as they do. He attaches him- 
self to his more immediate master, as if he knew to whom 
his eratitude was most due, and manifests towards him that 
affectionate regard which has been held to be the characteris- 
tic virtue of the Dog. M. Cuvier mentions a case, which has 
again and again been cited, but which will scarcely tire by 


* Naturalist’s Library. 


638 THE DOG. 


repetition. .A male wolf, brought up by a gentleman in the 
manner of a young dog, became familiar with every one 
whom he was in the habit of seeing. He followed his mas- 
ter wherever he went, was as obedient to his voice as the 
most docile dog, and differed, in truth, in nothing with re- 
spect to manners and habits from the dogs with which he 
associated. His master being obliged to travel, made a pre- 
sent of him to the Royal Menagerie of Paris. Here, shut up 
in his narrow compartment, the animal remained for many 
weeks listless and sad, and almost without tasting food. By 
degrees he recovered his spirits, attached himself to his 
keepers, and to all appearance lived as if he had forgotten 
his early friend, when, after an absence of eighteen months, 
the gentleman returned. At the very first word he uttered, 
the Wolf, who did not yet see him in the crowd, recognised 
in an instant the well-known voice, and testified his joy by 
loud cries. Being set at liberty, he flew to his friend, and 
overwhelmed him with caresses. Unfortunately his mas- 
ter was a second time obliged to quit him, and again the 
poor wolf relapsed into his former condition. Time, how- 
ever, slowly allayed his grief, and he gradually attached 
himself, as before, to the persons who tended him. Three 
years rolled on, a young dog had been given to him as his 
companion, and he seemed to pass his hours of confinement 
in tranquillity, when the gentleman once more returned. It 
was evening when he came, and the door of the prison-cell 
was shut, so that not a ray of light could pass through. But 
the poor wolf had heard the voice so familiar to him. He 
uttered loud cries, which redoubled when the bars which 
confined him were removed. He rushed forward, placed his 
fore-feet on the shoulders of his long-remembered friend, 
licked his face all over, and threatened with his teeth the 
keepers who might remove him. But separation, it is pain- 
ful to state, once more became necessary. rom that instant 
the poor wolf became sad and immoveable. He refused all 
food, he pined away, his hairs became dry and bristling, as 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 639 


in the case of animals that are sick, and his death was daily 
looked for. Once more, however, his health returned, his 
glossy fur was restored to him, and his keepers could again 
approach him. But his former gaiety never returned: he 
submitted to the soothing of his keepers, but he answered 
the advances of strangers only with menaces. 

Let us be just, then, to the loathed and persecuted Wolf, 
with respect to those attributes with which Nature has sup- 


_ plied him. In the state of nature, he possesses the habits 


and attributes which adapt him to his condition. But let 
him be withdrawn from the wild and savage state in which 
he must subsist, be relieved from the pressure of his natural : 


wants, be aided by human intelligence, and soothed by the 
‘Sympathy for which he is formed to be grateful, and we pro- 


duce a change, which may well be deemed the triumph of 
reason over the wildest propensities of inferior natures. The 
Wolf, in truth, becomes a Dog,—a member of that commu- 
nity of creatures which have become humanized, as it were, by 
intercourse with us, which yield up their powers to our service, 
which will remain attached to us when all the world may for- 
sake us, and will lay down their lives for our safety. But al- 
though the Wolf be beyond any reasonable question a Dog, yet 


it is not to be maintained that all dogs are derived from the 


Wolf. The Canide of many species are Spread over all the 


_ world, are probably all endowed with the same faculty of 


submitting themselves to human power, and, so far as is yet 


known, or a fair analogy will lead us to infer, are capable of 


breeding with one another, and producing a common race, in 
the domesticated state. But when the people of distant re- 


gions met and became mixed together, as was the case with the 


inhabitants of Europe and Western Asia, it may reasonably 
be believed that dogs of the different kinds which had been — 
domesticated would be brought together, forming a race, 
like the human inhabitants, of mixed descent. But then it 
may be asked, is not the Dog, the Canis familiaris of Lin- 


neus, a species? The answer, as has again and again been 
7 | 


640 THE DOG. 


observed, depends upon the meaning which we assign to the 
terms we use. If by species we mean, with many natural- . 
ists, animals descended from a common stock, as a pair of 
individuals, then we have little reason to Suppose that the do- 
mestic dog is a species. Neither is he a Species, if we do 
not extend to the species we call Dog all the essential charac- 
ters possessed by all the individuals,—the long muzzle of the 
greyhound, as well as the short one of the bull-dog,—the long 
ears of the spaniel, as well as the short ones of the terrier: 
but if we shall comprehend all these and the other characters 
common to all the varied kinds of dogs in our category, then, 
at least, in so far as characters of conformation connect ani- 
mals into a species, the Dog may be a Species; and if we 
find that the members of this group have the power of pro- 
creating with one another, and producing a fruitful progeny, 
then we have all the tests by which we discriminate Species 
applicable to the Common Dog. 

he Count de Buffon, after various failures, succeeded in 
rearing a mixed progeny of wolves and dogs, which he found 
to procreate freely with one another. Experiments, indeed, 
much more numerous and important, we have reason to be- 
lieve, have been made again and again. The Esquimaux, 
who use dogs for sledges, are in the habit of uniting their 
dogs with the wolves proper to these latitudes; and the 
same thing, it is believed, is done in certain parts of the 
south of Europe, in the case of the Black, and perhaps also 
the Gray, Wolves of these countries. The shepherds tame 
the young wolves, when they can procure them; and the 
whelps, being brought up with the sheep-dogs, are mixed 
with them in blood. But these being experiments of which 
no records are kept, we do not know to what degree, and 
in what manner, the subsequent progeny have been mingled 
in blood; and we are, therefore, obliged to refer to experi- 
ments conducted on the animals, with an express relation to 
the results to be observed. M. Frederick Cuvier gives a 
record of certain experiments made in the Royal Menagerie 


9 


“ 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 641 


of Paris, in which dogs and wolves were united together, 
and their progeny made to breed with one another; but he | 
draws the singular conclusion, that the progeny were hybrids, | 
and not the offspring of the same Species, because the mixed | 
breed became deteriorated from generation to generation. 
But the fact proves nothing with respect to the argument of 
M. Cuvier, and is but one of innumerable examples of effects 
long known in the practice of the breeders of domesticated 
animals. Not only is the dog not exempt from the injury to 
the constitution which results from continually reuniting 
animals of the same family in blood, but he is peculiarly sus- 
ceptible of deterioration from this cause. The experiment is 
easily and quickly made. If we shall breed a pair of dogs from 
a male and female of the same litter, and unite again the off- 
Spring of this pair, we shall produce at once a feeble race of 
creatures ; and the process being repeated for one or two 
generations more, the family will die out, or be incapable of 
propagating their race. A gentleman of Scotland made the 
experiment on a large scale with certain fox-hounds, and he 
found that the race actually became monstrous, and perished | 
utterly. We do not know the precise details of M. Cuvier’s 


experiment, but if it at all approached to that referred to | 


with respect to the nearness of blood of the animals united, | 
the result is no other than what might have been inferred 
from old experience. Nay, the want of due exercise and 
suitable treatment, would account for a decay of physical 
strength in the animals subjected to the experiment. At 
Moscow, we are informed, on the authority of Pallas, a mixed 
breed was produced between the Black Wolf and the Dog, | 
the descendants of which were fruitful with one another ; 
and no notice is taken of Subsequent degeneracy. In truth, 
there is not the least reason to believe, that a mixture of the 
blood of the Wolf with that of the Dog would produce de- 
_ Scendants whose progeny would degenerate. Analogy rather 
leads us to infer, that a mixture of the blood of the wilder 


and stronger animal would add strength and vigour to the 
| 28 


642 THE DOG. 


domesticated race; and it is believed, that, when shepherds 
have crossed their dogs with wolves, one of their purposes 
has been to give vigour and courage to their sheep-dogs. 
But a fact even more conclusive, if possible, than the union of 
wolves and dogs in the domesticated state, is, that they unite 
together in the state of freedom. In the expedition of Cap- 
tain Parry to the circumpolar seas, a she-wolf, at the period 
of heat in these latitudes, paid almost daily visits to the 
neighbourhood of the ships, and continued to do so until she 


was joined by a setter dog belonging to one of the officers. 


“ They were usually together,” says Captain Sabine, “ from 
two to three hours ; and, as they did not go far away, unless 
an endeavour was made to approach them, repeated and de- 
cided evidence was obtained of the purpose for which they 
were thus associated.’’* 

The difference between the aspect and form of the Wolf 
and of the Dog, is the greater strength of shoulder of the 
unreclaimed animal, his stouter limbs, his longer claws, his 
stronger teeth, the greater obliquity of his eye, and his coarser 
fur,—differences not greater in degree than have been pro- 
duced in various other animals by domestication, as between 
the Wild Hog and the reclaimed, the Wild Horse of Tartary 
and the Hackney of England, the Wild Turkey and tame. 
But, further, it is not with dogs of mixed race, as those of 
Southern Europe and Western Asia, that we ought to com- 
~ pare the Wolf, for the purpose of determining the differences 
between him and the domesticated animals, but with those 
dogs, if they can be obtained, in which no mixture of races 
may be supposed to have taken place. Now this compari- 
son we have the power of making, in the case of the dogs of 
the Laplanders of Europe, of the Greenlanders, and of the 
Esquimaux of America. These dogs approach in so great a 
degree, in their external characters, to the wolves of the 
same latitudes, that often the eye alone cannot distinguish 


* Supplement to the Appendix to Captain Parry’s First Voyage. 


“iio 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. oe 


them ; and the dogs of the Kamtschatkans do not seem to be 
more different from the Siberian wolves, than the latter are 
from the wolves of France and Spain. 
The proposition that Wolves, by domestication, may be- 
come Dogs, it is to be observed, is very different from the 
proposition that all Dogs are descended from Wolves; and 
yet the arguments directed against even the latter hypothe- 
Sis, have nothing of the force which has been ascribed to 
them. It has been again and again contended, that the won- 
derful divergence of dogs from the normal characters of the 
Wolf, proves the animals to be distinct ; and that what we 
term domestication of the wolf is nothing more than a kind 
of taming, such as may take place in the case of the tiger, or 
any other animal. But it is manifest, that the divergence of 
dogs from the typical characters of the wolf presents pre- 
cisely the same difficulty as the divergence of the characters 
of dogs from some common Species, some Canis Primordialis, 
either existing or extinct. If we can Suppose this assume 
Species to have given rise to animals go different as the grey- 
hound and the terrier, surely we can suppose that the Wolf, | 
or any other known Canis, can have given rise to the same / 
animals. And again, with respect to the assertion that 
the wolf is tamed, but not domesticated,.we ask, Is not the 
Wolf domesticated who acquires all the habitudes, even to 
_ the modulation of his voice, of the domesticated dog, who de- 
votes himself in the like manner to our service, and who - 
relinquishes the appetites proper to him in the state of na- 
ture? If this be not domestication, some new definition 
must be given of the term. It has been said that the tamed 
wolf cannot be depended upon, may prove treacherous, may 
return to his ancient propensities of killing poultry, and eat- 
ing animals, not excepting his own master; and, lastly, that 
the instinctive antipathy between the wolf and the dog 
Proves that they cannot be the same. But do not dogs 
Sometimes prove treacherous; and would they not devour 
our geese, if they were not subjected to the wholesome terror 


644. THE DOG. 


with which we contrive to inspire them? The tamed wolf, 
doubtless, manifests a taste for poultry, as well as his mas- 
ter; but even a single generation is not always required to 
banish a propensity which seems almost instinctive. M. 
Frederick Cuvier mentions the case of a she-wolf who had 
been taken in a trap when an adult, but who became so 
gentle, that she could be left in a poultry-yard, without 
her offering the least violence. That tamed wolves may 
attack other animals and devour them, is what the ruder 
dogs will do, if not subjected to due discipline. Is it not 
marvellous, then, that the Wolf, even before a few genera- 
tions have passed between that of his wild state and his pre- 
sent condition, should be taught to abandon such a propen- 
sity? With regard to the Wolf’s attacking his master and 
devouring him, no instance of the kind, it is believed, is on 

record. Colonel Hamilton Smith, indeed, mentions a story 
told him by a butcher of New York regarding a tamed wolf, 
which the man asserted had attacked him when he entered 
at night the shambles in which the animal was confined. 
But, giving all credit to the story as it was told by the man, 
what does it prove? The wolf, it seems, had been chained 
for two years in a slaughter-house, and lived, we are assured, 
“in a complete superabundance of blood and offal,” that is, 
he was kept in a situation in which he was the constant wit- 
ness of all that was calculated to excite and keep alive his 
fiercest appetites. It would have been a marvel if, under 
such circumstances, the animal had not remained wild and 
savage. Besides, we know nothing of the manner in which 
this wolf was treated by his master, except that he was 
chained in a slaughter-house. But wolves, we may believe, 
are, like dogs, resentful of injuries, as well as grateful for 
benefits. It is known that the larger dogs of this country will 
_ fly upon their master, as upon any one else, if they are mal- 
treated by him. Even fox-hounds, though trained up under the 
terror of continued discipline from the litter, will fall upon 
their keeper, if he suddenly enters their kennel under night 


6 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 645 


Need we wonder thata wolf, fed on blood and garbage, should 
have attacked any person, whether his master, so called, or 
another, who had the hardihood to enter his prison under the 
cloud of night. With respect, again, to the antipathy ad- 
mitted to exist between the Wolf aud the Dog, what reason- 
able inference can be drawn from the fact with respect to 
the identity or non-identity of the animals? Dogs them- 
selves, we know, even of the same litter, will fight with and 
destroy one another. Is it wonderful that wolves, placed 
in a state of habitual enmity with animals so different in 
habits and aspect from themselves, should treat them in 
the same manner as they would any other prey; or that the 
protected dogs should manifest antipathy to so cruel an ene- 
my? But when wolves are truly domesticated, so far are 
they from manifesting antipathy to the common dogs, that 
they attach themselves to them in a remarkable manner, and 
become their fondest associates. 

The largest and fiercest of the Canide are commonly 
-termed Wolves; and there is no other essential distinction 
between them and the smaller Canide, into which they pass 
by gradations. Of the Wolves of Asia, greatly the most 
diffused seem to be the Common and Black Wolves, and. 
their varieties ; although others, equally entitled to be re- 
garded as species, may be believed to exist in the vast re- 
gions. of the centre and east, as well as in the numerous 
Islands of the Hastern Seas. One from these Islands, in- 
deed, has been for some time known to European naturalists. 
It is the Canis Javanicus of French naturalists, and is of the 
size and proportions of the Common Wolf. Of the Wolves 
of Africa, our knowledge is yet more confined. It is ge- 
-nerally believed, indeed, that the common Wolves of Eu- 
rope inhabit the mountains of Northern Africa, and even 
extend to the high lands of Abyssinia on the east. But of 
the immeasurable deserts of the interior, we know little re- 
garding the living inhabitants. Travellers, indeed, speak of 
dangerous wolves found in Senegal and elsewhere ; but they 


646 THE DOG. 


do not communicate the information necessary to enable the 
naturalist to recognize the species. 

The term Wolf, it has been said, is merely employed to 
designate the larger and fiercer Canide, though it appears to 
have been employed in a more extensive sense by the ancients, 
and to have included various species which we should now 
rather term Wild Dogs. ‘The less fierce and powerful mem- 
bers of the group are yet more numerous in species than the 
wolves, so called. They are the inhabitants especially of the 
warmer or temperate countries; are generally more limited 
with respect to range of place than the larger wolves, and 
less ferocious and sanguinary, though not always more ready 
to resign themselves to domestication. Yet they all appear 
to be possessed of this same faculty, and some of them to have 
been domesticated from early times, contributing to give us 
those smaller and gentler varieties of the domestic dogs with 
which we are familiar, and, being mingled in blood with the 
other members of the family, to produce, under the various 
agencies affecting them in the subjugated state, that end- 
less variety which characterizes the community of domes- 
tic dogs, and which no other hypothesis but that of a differ- 
ent descent can explain. 

Of the Wild Dogs of a former age, and yet existing in the 
state of liberty, one is the Canis anthus of Frederick Cuvier, 
the Deeb of the Arabs. This dog was regarded by the an- 
cients as a wolf, and still inhabits the deserts bordering on 
the Nile. He is about 16 inches high at the shoulder, and 
measures from the nose to the tail about 24 feet. He greatly 
resembles many of the dogs or wolves sculptured on the an- 
cient monuments of Egypt; and may be reasonably supposed 
to have been one of the species from which this early people 
derived their domesticated races. A head, taken from the 


~ catacombs of Lycopolis, the City of Wolves, is supposed, by 


the traveller Riippel, to be of this species ; and with respect 
to the Egyptian dogs, as they are generally represented on 


we 


12 > EY REM 
‘ 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 647 


_ the monuments, it is to be observed, that they have a far 


nearer resemblance to the lighter forms distinctive of the 
African dogs, than to the more massive forms of those of 
northern countries. 

The whole of Africa, it may be said, abounds in Canide, 
many of them very elegant and variously coloured. Some 
of them have very long ears, a character which connects 


them with the Fennecs or Zerdas, a curious tribe of dogs, 


which are more fitted to live on fruit, honey, the eggs of 
birds, and insects, than the other Canide, but which likewise 
pursue the smaller game, They burrow in the sandy de- 
serts, frequently under the roots of the palm and other trees, 
in the manner of foxes. Their large external ears are fitted 
to endow them with an exquisite sense of hearing, which 
may be supposed to be a mean of avoiding their enemies, or 
of being conducted by the sound to their proper prey. They 
are furnished, too, with fur on the soles of their feet, appa- 
rently to enable them to tread softly on the ground, and ap- 
proach their prey in silence. Wald Dogs of different species, 
some of them very fierce, fleet, and wild, have been found in 
almost all the countries of Africa that have been visited, 
from the Libyan deserts to the countries of the Bushmen 
and Hottentots, who, although amongst the rudest of men, 
have yet learned to turn to use those animals of their coun- 
try; and, indeed, it may be said, no people have yet been 
discovered so rude as not to have domesticated the dogs pro- 
per to the countries they inhabit. 

The ancients frequently refer to’ Wild Dogs, as inhabiting 
their own or the neighbouring countries. ‘They were found, 
and are yet found, in Arabia, Syria, and Asia Minor. They 
appear to extend all eastward through Persia, to the coun- 
tries connected with the great Himalaya range and its tribu- 
tary chains. They live in bands, and pursue their prey in 
the manner of all the Canidw, namely, by scent, by speed, 
and generally by uniting into packs; and are of different 
species, often confounded under the name of Chacals, or 


648 THE DOG. 


some corresponding term, proper to the dialects of the Tur- 


comans and other Asiatics. 

The Dog of Beloochistan is a wild ferocious dog, shy, and 
keeping aloof from human habitations. These dogs hunt in 
packs, during the day, of twenty or thirty together, and tire 
out their prey by the pertinacity of their pursuit, following it 
hour after hour, league after league, from twilight to dawn. 
They will attack the buffalo, or the largest animals of the 
country, and pull them down by their united force. They 
are like stout hounds, of a rufous colour, and somewhat short 
in the legs, Itis not known how far this species extends 
Into the wild countries adjoining, or what relations it has 
with the next mentioned species, with which it may be even 
identical, 

The Buansa of Nepaul, Canis primevus of Hodgson, ap- 
pears to be a species very widely extended. It is in size be- 
tween a wolf and jackall, and may be compared to a stout 
fox-hound. It hunts by day as well as by night, in troops of 
from six to ten individuals, following its game rather by 
scent than by sight, and wearing it out by persevering pur- 
suit. It barks, though with a tone of voice somewhat pecu- 
liar to itself. It is very untameable, unless when taken 
young, but the puppies which are reared amongst domestic 
dogs seem to exhibit equal sagacity. The species seems to 
belong to the woody and rocky mountain ranges between the 
Sutledj and Brahmapootra, but it appears, with some varia- 
tions of character, to extend greatly to the south, as to. the 
Ghauts, the Nielgherries, and the coast of Coromandel; at 
least, Dogs so nearly resembling it have been found in these 
different localities, that they have been generally assumed 
to be the same. Mr Hodgson, who was long a resident 
in Nepaul, was the first to give us distinct accounts of this 
species. He supposed it to be the original of all the domes- 
tic dogs in the world, and hence termed it Canis primevus. 
This kind of dog, indeed, haying all the habits of the Hound, 
may well be supposed, amongst nations of hunters, to have 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 649 


von early reclaimed and Sinninbid to the chase, for which he is 
so admirably fitted, and, perhaps, to have given origin to the 
hunting dogs of very distant countries ; but there is nothing 
in the characters of this, more than in those of any other 
given species, that can enable us to conclude that it can have 
produced all the dogs of the world. There is no more re- 
semblance between the mountain hound of N. epaul, and the 
sledge-dog of Greenland, than between the greyhound of Per- 
sia and the terrier of England. 

Another class of Wild Dogs, which have received the name 
of Dholes, are found in various parts of India, and, doubtless, 
in other countries of the East. They seem to be of different 
species, but have the general habits of the other Canide. , 
Some of these are described as approaching to the conforma- | 
tion of the Persian Greyhound, and as being very fleet. Some | 


- of them have been domesticated, and employed in the chase. | 


Captain Williamson refers to their fleetness, but states that 
they are not to be depended upon for coursing, being apt 
suddenly to give up the chase when it is severe, and often to 
prefer the chase of the goat or sheep to that of the hare. 
He says that they are valuable in hog-hunting. 

The Dog appears with different characters in China and 
the islands of the Eastern Seas. We have been rendered 
familiar with this class of dogs by means of the Dingo of 
New Holland, so called, it is believed, from a name given to 
certain wild dogs found near the Gulf of Guinea. This ani- 
mal has probably been carried from the adjoming countries — 
to this vast insular continent, because it differs from all the 
other animals distinctive of it. Be this as it may, it has mul- 
tiplied in an astonishing degree, and has become the pest of 
the settled inhabitants. It is a wild and agile dog, very fleet 
and fierce. It pursues the Kangaroo, and the flocks of sheep 
which have now multiplied in the country, destroying them 
in the manner of the Wolf. The Dingo hag the habit of 
burrowing, and does not bark in the wild state; but by do- 
mestication it learns to imitate the barking of domestic dogs, 


650 THE DOG. 


though imperfectly. It has been partially reclaimed by the 
savage inhabitants of New Holland, and taught to assist 
them in the chase. It breeds with more difficulty with the 
common dogs than these dogs do with the wolf or even the 
_ fox; yet occasionally a union takes place. The mixed race 
partakes of the characters of both parents ; and, for the first 
generation at least, retains much of the wild habits of the 
Dingo.* Many of the domesticated dogs of China and J apan 
have a distinct relation to this type. They hardly bark, and 
though very playful, have less docility than the domesticated 
dogs of Western Asia and Europe. The Chinese dogs of 
this race have the tongue and palate black, and they are 
used for food by this singular people. 

Of the various groups of Canidze, the most extensive, with 
respect to the number of individuals, is that which compre- 
hends the species included under the term Jackal or Chacal, 
a name derived from several languages of Asia. But the 
Jackal receives numerous names in the dialects of the coun- 
tries he inhabits, usually indicative of his peculiar cry, which 
is that of howling, so that he is termed the Howling Dog, the 
Chief of the Howlers, and so forth. 

The Jackal, of his proper species and varieties, has a vastly 
extended geographical range. He is found all over Africa, 
from Barbary to the countries of the Caffres and Hottentots. 
He exists in Arabia and the neighbouring deserts, and has 
even been carried, though at a period comparatively recent, 
westward into Greece, and northward into the Steppes of 
Southern Russia. But his appropriate range is from Arabia 
through the warmer and temperate parts of Southern and 
Central Asia all eastward. Thus he is found in Asia Minor, 
in the countries of the Euphrates, eastward through Persia 
to the Indus, and even spreading northwards into the coun- 


* A female Dingo, which I had for several years, produced a litter to a 
common Dog. They were handsome and playful, but not very docile. They 
retained the disposition of their mother to dig holes in the ground, as if 
desirous to burrow. They began to attack poultry when merely puppies, and 
could never be cured of the habit. 


i) 
| i 


eee 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 651 


tries of the Turcomans. Crossing the Indus, he is found 


over all Hindostan to the regions beyond the Ganges. He 
appears in China Proper, and stretches northward into the 
countries of the Kalmuks; and he is found in Borneo and 
other great islands of the Eastern Seas. Thus the Jackal, 
of whatever species or varieties, occupies a great part of 
the habitable world. His temperament, indeed, seems best 
suited to the warmer and less humid countries, where he 
multiplies in the greatest degree; although, extending north- 
wards into the deserts of the Turcomans and Kalmuks, it 
seems that he is fitted to endure a considerable degree of cold. 

This curious dog approaches in certain of his characters 
and habits to the fox, and may be regarded as intermediate 
between foxes and the diurnal dogs. But he is longer in 
the limbs than the fox, has a shorter fur and less bushy 
tail, and has the pupil of the eye circular, whereas in the fox 
it is elongated. He burrows like the fox, but is nothing like 


so solitary and nocturnal in his habits. On the contrary, he 


is eminently gregarious and social ; and although, as in the 
case of other wild animals of prey, the night is the time 
which he takes to seek his food, he does not fear to issue. 
from his retreat at any time. He is of all the wild Canide 


_ the most familiar with man, congregating around his dwel- 


lings, that he may share or purloin his food. Like all the 
Fere in a state of nature, he is voracious, hunting during all 
the night, entering the hamlets and villages, and, like the 
hyeenas, carrying off the garbage and offal which he finds ; 
nay, it is said, digging into the sepulchres, and violating the 
remains of the dead. He has the cunning habits of the fox, 
with far greater audacity. He examines the fastenings of 
doors and windows, that he may enter into yards, outhouses, 
and unguarded dwellings, stealing whatever he can reach, 
as skins, and any edible substance; and, entering the hen- 
roosts, he kills every animal. Like the fox, too, he feeds on 
certain ripe fruits, and, lurking in the vineyards, fattens upon 
the grapes. The cry of the Jackal is peculiar and distinguish- 


652 THE DOG. 


able from that of all other dogs. It ig a shrill yell, no sooner 
uttered by one than responded to by all within hearing, in 
every conceivable variety of tone. The chorus begun, is 
heard far and wide through. the neighbouring wilds and 
jungles, intermitted only to be raised again and again, louder 
and louder, and almost banishing sleep from those who are 
unused to it. The slightest note of one of their number suf- 
fices to raise the wild ery all round, nay, even a note of music, 
or a sound of the human voice. At the cantonments of Euro- 
pean troops in the woody parts of India, where a great deal 
of animal food, which the natives will not touch, is cast 
about, the J ackals, after the sun is set, draw silently near, 
and nothing betrays their presence. But should an alarm 
be given, or one of their number, from any cause, be in- 
cited to utter the signal cry, in an instant the sympathetic 
chorus is raised, and responded to from the distant jungles. 
At the charming period of the tropical day, when, the sun 
being just sunk, a brief twilight ensues, scarcely giving warn- 
ing of the coming darkness, an English gentleman with a very 
young lady was walking in the gardens of his mansion. The 
young lady, who knew that the gentleman Sang, asked him 
to give her some old-remembered tune. The first notes were 
hardly uttered, when hundreds of J ackals, couched all around 
unseen, answered with an appalling cry, which rung through 
the neighbouring woods, as if thousands of wild beasts were 
ready to fall upon the musician. But there is another cry 
of the Jackal which is not thus responded to. This is uttered 
by the solitary Jackal, who is watching the stealthy march 
of the lion or the tiger. He follows the murderer at the 
fitting distance, and utters from time to time his warning 
cry. It is understood by those for whose safety it is uttered ; 
and now, in place of the wild chorus, a silence like that of 
the dead prevails around. These animals, it has been said, 
are eminently social. They form their burrows near to one 
another, and, congregating together, pursue their prey in 
concert, hunting in packs like well-trained beagles. When 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. — 658 


one of their number is assailed, and utters a cry of distress, 
all who are within hearing hasten to the rescue, and, if they 
are able to master the enemy, fall upon him. They combine 
to protect themselves from attack, and join in the pursuit of 
the domestic dogs which they may wish to chage away. These 
creatures are unmolested by the Mahommedans, who, al- 
though they hold the dog to be unclean, will not take away 
his life ; but sometimes they are hunted by English sports- 
men after the manner of their country, either by common 
dogs or fox-hounds. They are easily run down by the former 
when at a distance from their burrows, and, in the case of 
hounds, do not afford the same sport as the hardy fox of 
Europe. They make, however, desperate resistance, biting 
very fiercely the dogs that come up to them; and when at 
length they are overpowered, it is said they will pretend to be 
slain, and allow themselves to be pulled about as if dead, as 
is the case with the polecat and some other animals in this 
country. | 

The Jackal is eminently susceptible of domestication, The 
offensive odour proper to him in the natural state goes away, 
and he speedily acquires the manners of other dogs. But he 
_ is taught to bark with difficulty, and so is little suited for 
watching. He is further very timid, so that jackals are not 
fitted to form a useful class of dogs, though some of the Tur- 
coman tribes, according to Pallas, have no other kind for 
watching their flocks. From the wide diffusion of this ani- 
mal, his familiarity, and near resemblance to the common 


dogs, it was long an opinion of many naturalists, that he was \ 


the parent stock of the domestic races. This opinion is now 
generally abandoned ; but yet it is probable that the blood of 


the Jackal has, in numerous cases, been mingled with that of: / 


the domestic races of the countries which he inhabits, Ey 
From the Jackals, and other diurnal Canide, there is a 
gradation to the true Foxes, forming an intermediate group. 
In India they are usually regarded as small jackals ; but in 
the countries where jackals do not exist, they are naturally: 


ns 


/ 


5 ie 
shi aes ins tech dea siesiehlanheth comedian ci a esl ec Rl RN eM go Se A tes 


654 THE DOG. 


arranged with the foxes, which, indeed, they more nearly 
resemble. In this group are usually comprehended the Cor- 
sac, inhabiting the great deserts of Tartary toward the 
sources of the Irtish, and the same species, or others nearly 
resembling it, found in the warmer countries of the East, 
including the little Indian dog of Malabar, the Pale Dog- 
fox, an inhabitant of Darfur and Kordofan, burrowing in the 
sand, and hunting only at night, the Turkish Dog-fox, and 
others. 

The true Foxes inhabit every part of the world, from the 
Arctic Regions and the gloomy shores of Terra del Fuego, 


to the most burning regions of either continent. They are 
distinguished from the wolves and dogs, so called, by their 
having the pupil of the eye elongated, so that, by expanding 
or contracting it, they can admit a greater or smaller quan- 
tity of light ; by their living apart in deep holes, which they 
form for themselves; by their pursuing their prey alone and 
at night ; and by their never uniting, accordingly, to capture 
it by the chase. Like most nocturnal burrowing animals, 
they emit a fetid odour from the skin; their feet are covered 
with hair, so that they may steal softly upon their game ; 
they are clothed with a thick fur, partly of hair, and partly 
of wool, which grows underneath the hair, and is covered by 
it. They have the tails long and bushy, and the fur is of 
various colours, generally tending to black or brown. When 
fine and woolly, as in the colder countries, itis greatly sought 
after, and thousands of the animals are killed every year for 
supplying this production. 

Of the many species of Fox, that which is the most fami- 
liar to us is the Common Fox, Canis Vulpes, which has a 
wider range of place than any other. Like all other ani- 
mals having an extensive range, his characters vary greatly 


according to climate, locality, and the nature and abundance 


of his prey. Even within narrow geographical limits, the 
Common Fox presents himself with considerable differences 
of external characters. Thus, in the British Islands, sports- 


if 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 655 


men recognize the long-legged fox of the mountains, which 
has to travel to great distances to obtain his prey, and which 


they call the Greyhound Fox ; the fox of certain woody dis- 


tricts, called, from his larger size, the Mastiff-Fox ; and the 
common Cur Fox, which is the least of all, and approaches 
nearest to our dwellings. 

The Fox is characterised by the wary habits which his 
condition requires. His prey is the smaller game, rabbits, 
hares, birds which build their nests on the ground, and the 
eggs and young of such birds. He steals upon his prey, and 
does not, like the wolf and the wild hounds, seek to capture 
it by pursuit. He lies in wait, or, cautiously approaching, 
springs upon the game. Although a strong animal in pro- 
portion to his bulk of body, he never courts a combat with any 
animal that can oppose him by physical strength. It is in the 
night only that he quits his hole or covert, although he sees 
perfectly during the day, contracting the pnpils of his eyes 
to the degree required to allow of perfect vision. In pro- 
portion to his intercourse with his greatest enemy, man, his 
caution and sense of danger increase. In wild and distant 
places, as the fur-countries of America, he readily enough 


falls into the snares prepared for him in the woods. But, in - 


settled countries, he is suspicious, in the highest degree, of 
means employed to entrap him. He will sometimes enter 
into out-houses, where fowls and other small animals are 
kept, but never until he has examined the place again and 
again, and provided for safety and escape. If he sees a trap, 
or even a string suspended, his suspicions are excited, and 
he turns back until frequent visits have assured him that no 
danger exists. When at length he-is resolved to make his 
way into a hen-roost or poultry-yard, he makes the utmost 
of his opportunities. Killing the animals with the, least pos- 
sible noise, he removes them one by one, and conveys them 
to his hole, or buries them in the ground where he may find 
them again, and never, like the wolf or dingo, topinans from 


| the mere instinct of destruction. 


7 


“eeguee tment a : 


656 THE DOG. 


The female goes with young sixty days or more, and the 
season of heat is in winter, so that she may bring forth 
when young game is plentiful, and easy to be obtained. The 
puppies are born blind, and remain so for ten or twelve days. 
The mother is the most tender of nurses, and she keeps the 
whelps carefully concealed until they are able to venture 
forth. When she fancies that their retreat has been dis- 
covered, she carries them away, one by one, in her mouth, 
and takes them to a place of safety ; nay, she has been known, 
after she had heard the noise of the hounds, and knew that 
her life was at stake, to carry away her little whelps, before 
she quitted the cover, to which she might never return. 

The Fox shews that he knows full well the purpose for 
which he is sought by the numerous dogs, which, for our sport 
and his destruction, we bring to the place of his retreat. 
The wiles he employs to save himself are too familiar to need 
to be mentioned. ‘They are calculated to excite our admira- 
tion and pity, even when they contribute to our pastime. He 
makes every effort to save himself which his wonderful sa- 
gacity enables him to employ, and when at length, after the 
fruitless exercise of his strength and powers, he is overtaken 
by the pack, he sells his life bravely, though he knows that 
it cannot be saved, and dies without a groan. 

The Fox, when taken young, is playful and familiar like 
other dogs, and manifests his attachment to those who treat 
him with kindness ; but even in captivity, he retains the in- 
stincts of his race, of stealing upon the animals which are 
his natural prey, a8 poultry of all kinds, and hence it igs 
necessary to keep him in confinement, so that it may be 
| doubted if a single instance has occurred in which a breed 
of foxes has been subjected to true domestication. The 

wolf, wild. and fierce as he is, submits himself to the power 
of superior reason: the fox seems to abandon tardily the 
instincts proper to him. But the fox breeds with the do- 
mesticated dog; although, in the state of captivity, he does 
so with reluctance, as if he feared to propagate a race of 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 657 


slaves. In the state of liberty, however, the union is not it 
unfrequent. The fact, though questioned by naturalists, | 
has been long known to shepherds. By tying the female { 
sheep-dogs, when they are in heat, at a distance from houses, / 
they have been again and again impregnated by the wild | 
foxes which are attracted to them. The result of the union | 
is a race partaking of the characters of both parents. They | 
are less fitted for being sheep-dogs than the cultivated breeds, / 
but they are sagacious and bold, and manifest a peculiar ap- | 
titude for attacking weasels, rats, badgers, and other ani- | 
mals termed vermin ; and are, in truth, a kind of terriers. 
Certain Canidae, it has been seen, of the Old World have 
found their way to the New, and multiplied in the boundless 
regions where they have acquired a habitation. The Com- 
mon and the Black Wolves, it is easy to conceive, may still 
find their way thither when the Arctic Regions are covered 
with ice; but being placed under new conditions with re- 
spect to climate and the nature and abundance of their food, 
the animals undergo modifications, from the extent of which 
some naturalists have conceived that the common wolves of 
North America are specifically distinct from those of Asia 
and Kurope. But the differences are in external aspect and 
trivial characters, and are less in degree than those which — 
present themselves between the wolves of one part of Europe 
and another. But whatever the conclusion arrived at with 
respect to the identity or non-identity of certain groups shall 
be, it is perfectly certain, that wolves of the higher latitudes 
of North America have been reclaimed, and become the dogs 
of the rude inhabitants. The wild and the tame of the 
Species present nO greater differences than we see in the case 
of other animals in the state of nature and of domestication. 
The intrepid Arctic travellers, who have recently added so 
wonderfully to our knowledge of these desolate regions, have 
assured us, that the sledge-dogs of the natives, and the | 
wolves of the country, are the same. They inform us that 
they have more than once mistaken the bands of wild wolves | 
ae 


ge 


——— 


658 THE DOG. 


_ which they encountered for the domestic dogs of an Indian 
party. The animals howl in the same manner, and exhibit 
the same habits; and that they breed with one another, is 
indisputable. Captain Back informs us, that the mixed pro- 
| geny of wolves and dogs are perfectly known to the natives, 
_ and are valued by them as being stronger, as beasts of draught, 
\ than the ordinary dogs. No doubt, then, exists, that the 
large dogs of these people are true wolves, and wolves not 
less fierce and strong than those which have been reclaimed 
by the Laplanders and northern inhabitants of Europe. The 
American wolves, indeed, are not so ready to attack human 
beings as those of Europe and the more populous parts of 
Asia, but this is not because they are less fierce and strong, 
but because they. have fewer opportunities of trying their 
powers on man. In the spring of 1826, a large gray wolf 
was driven by hunger to prowl amongst the huts erected in 

_ the vicinity of Port Franklin; but he did not venture upon } 
an attack, and being foiled in his endeavours to procure food, 
was found a few days afterwards dead upon the snow. Yet 
Dr Richardson was informed that a poor Indian woman had 
been some time before strangled by a wolf, before the husband, 
who saw the attack, could hurry to the rescue. Of the bold- 
ness of these animals, numerous examples might be given. 
Captain Lyon, speaking of the wolves of Melville Island, says, 
“ The wolves had now grown so bold as to come alongside, 
and on this night they broke into a snow-hut, in which a couple 
of newly purchased Esquimaux dogs were confined, and car- 
ried them off, but not without some difficulty, for in the day- 
light we found even the ceiling of the hut sprinkled with 
blood and hair. When the alarm was giveh, and the wolves 
were fired at, one of them was observed carrying a dead dog 
in his mouth, clear of the ground, at a canter, notwithstand- 
ing the animal was of his own weight. Before morning they 
tore a quantity of canvass off the observatory, and devoured 
it.” At Cumberland House, a wolf, which was seen prowling 
about the fort, was fired at, struck by a musket-ball, and. 


a sat eG phn Rin cag a aR cree er ee 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. ~ 659 


severely wounded. He returned again in the dark, stream- 
ing with blood, and carried off a dog from amongst fifty 
others. Although the wild and the tame animals are assu- 
redly identical, yet such has been the effect of slavery on the 
one, and of liberty and the continued exercise of their 
powers on the other, that the subjugated dogs have the ut- 
most dread of their savage congeners, and can scarcely mus- 
ter courage to face them, even in self-defence. 

All the tribes of North American Indians have dogs, but 
differmg much in size and other characters from the large 
sledge-dogs of the northern natives. It may be believed, 
therefore, that different canine Species have been domesti- 
cated in different parts of these vast countries. Of these 
there is one which seems, by its temperament, to be pecu- 
liarly fitted for domestication, the Prairie Wolf or Prairie 
Dog. | 

The Prairie Dogs are found in great numbers towards the 
sources of the Missouri and elsewhere, from about the 55° 
of north latitude southward. Their fur is mostly of an ashy- 
gray colour, with the cheeks, chin, throat, belly, and inside of 
the thighs, white, and the tail is bushy, and clothed with 
long hair and wool. They are smaller than the gray wolves, 
and not unlike the shepherd’s dogs of some countries of 
Europe. They burrow like foxes, and are very swift of foot, 
and, assembling in numbers together, hunt in packs, pur- 
suing the deers, the bisons, and other animals. ‘They have 
a barking voice, and assemble round the hunter at the first 
report of his gun, as if conscious of his purpose, and hoping 
to share the spoils of the chase. They are easily tamed, and 
form, either pure or mixed. with other races, the dogs of 
Indian tribes. | 

Of the domesticated Dogs of the North American Indians, 
one is the Hare Indian Dog, cultivated by the tribes fre- 
quenting the borders of the Great Bear Lake, and the banks of 
the river Mackenzie. It is minutely described by Dr Richard- 
son, who informs us that it is used by the Indians solely for 


660 THE DOG. 


the chase, being too small for a beast of burthen or draught. 
It has a certain degree of independence, and dislikes con- 
finement, but is exceedingly playful, is of an affectionate 
temper, and is readily gained by acts of kindness. Dr Rich- 
ardson had himself one, which, when only seven months old, 
ran on the snow by the side of his sledge for 900 miles. . It 
was at length killed and eaten by an Indian, who pretended 
that he had mistaken it for a fox. Dr Richardson states, 
that it is inferior to the Prairie Wolf in size, but that its 
resemblance to it in other respects is so great, that he could 
discover no difference of form except in the smaller size of 
the cranium. The length and fineness of the fur, and the 
very arrangement of the spots of colour, he says, are the 


4 


| same in both ; and in fact, adds he, it bears the same rela- 
tion to the Prairie Wolf that the Esquimaux Dog bears to 
| the Great Gray Wolf. It is remarkable that the learned 
\ and observing naturalist should seem desirous to escape the 
} necessary conclusion, namely, that the Hare Indian Dog is 


_merely the Prairie Wolf in the state of domestication. 

Dr Richardson likewise describes the domesticated dogs of — 
the native tribes of parts of Canada and the countries of Hud- 
son’s Bay. They appear to be intermediate in size and form 
between the larger Dog of the Esquimaux, and the smaller one 
of the Hare Indians. They will be best described in the 
words of the bold traveller himself. “ This breed wants the 
strength of the Esquimaux dog, and does not possess the 
affectionate and playful disposition of the Hare Indian va- 
riety. It is used at certain seasons in the chase, and by some 
tribes as a beast of burthen or draught; but it has all the 
sneaking habits of the wolf, without his courage, and without 


the intelligence of that animal. It unites with its compa- 


nions to assail a stranger on his approach to the hut of its 
_master; retreats on the least shew of resistance, or endea-— 
vours to get behind him, and silently snap at his legs. A 
little Scotch terrier that accompanied us on the last-expedi- 
tion, disconcerted the largest of them by the smartness of 


ae 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 661 


his attack, and used to send an animal more than four times 
his own size howling away, although the density of its woolly 
covering prevented his short teeth from wounding the skin. 
When they fight among themselves, the dog that is van- 
quished is not unfrequently torn in pieces by the rest of the 


pack. They hunt the larger domestic animals in packs, snap- 


ping at their heels, and harassing them until worn out, but 
scarcely ever venture to seize them by the throat.” The 
Dogs of Labrador, however, are of larger size, and are dis- 
tinctly to be referred to the type of the great Gray Wolf of 
the same country. . . 
Proceeding southward, other species of Canide present 


themselves, of which one is the Mexican Wolf, Lupus Mezxica-. 


nus of Smith. The range of this species is unknown, but 
individuals have been found as far to the north and east as 
Virginia. This animal is equal in stature to the Common 
Wolf, but has the head broader, with a thick neck, and he 


has a fur of varied colours. It is not known whether it has 
been domesticated. 7 


Southward of the mountains of Mexico, various species of 
Canide are found, distinct from those of the north. One of 
the largest of them is the Maned Aguara, which is found only 
to the south of the line, inhabiting chiefly the Swampy and 
more open countries. Itis a large animal, with stout limbs, 
and is furnished with a remarkable mane; but it is greatly 
inferior in strength to the true wolves, and manifests nothing 


‘like the courage and ferocity of these animals, Its prin- 


cipal prey seems to be the smaller game, and, in a peculiar 
degree, aquatic animals, on which account it is formed to 
swim with facility. It pursues its prey during the night, 
and does not hunt in packs like the Prairie Dog, or the 
Wild Hounds of Asia. Itis solitary and timid when reduced 
to captivity. The other Canide of South America, usually 
termed Aguaras by the natives, are of different species, and 
in external aspect somewhat resemble the curs and jackals 
with which we are familiar in Asia and Europe. 


662. THE DOG. 


When the rich and smiling shores of the New World were 
first visited by European plunderers, the natives were every- 
where found in possession of innumerable dogs, manifestly 
derived from the wild of species proper to the countries 
which they inhabited. They all differed from the dogs of 
Europe. They are yet possessed in considerable numbers 
by the ruder tribes, and are used for the chase of land-ani- 
mals, and in some cases for fishing. They are generally re- 
linquished by the Indians, when they can obtain those of 
European lineage, which are far superior in sagacity, courage, 
and power of endurance, to the native dogs of South America. 

Thus, in regions the most remote, and by people the most 
dissimilar, the Canide proper to different countries have been 
subjected to the uses of the human inhabitants. The Com- 
mon Wolf, under the modifications of character which he has 
tended to assume in the state of nature, is proper to the 
northern division of both hemispheres, and has been domesti- 
cated, accordingly, by the inhabitants of both. Southward of 
the glacial regions on either continent, other dogs have been 
subdued,—in America those proper to the New World, and 
in Asia and Europe those pertaining to the Old. Africa, 
too, has produced its dogs for the uses of its inhabitants. 
The Common Wolf, though with those characters which pe- 
culiar agencies seem to produce on all the animal inhabit- 
ants of this continent, has doubtless yielded his services to 
the natives of Africa, as well as to those of Asia and Europe. 
But there are other Canide proper to the same vast conti- 
nent, which we may believe to have been likewise subdued, 
as the Egyptian Wolf or Deeb, and the Canide of Senegal 
and the interior, and perhaps the Hunting Hyena, and even 
the beautiful little Zerdas with their soft hair, their long ears, 
and gentle habits. The dogs of Africa, indeed, seem to be 
extremely varied; and it is reasonable to believe, that it is to 
this source that we owe some of those gentler and smaller 
dogs with which we are familiar, and which have always 
been derived in the greatest numbers, or rather all or igi- 


aniundtitinn 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. . 663 


nally; from the countries of the Mediterranean. When the 
Canaries were discovered, numerous dogs, of a large size, 


were found in the possession of the inhabitants. Inthe heart 


of Africa, dogs have been found having much of the charac- 
ters of the older Blood-hounds of England. Two of these were 
brought home by Major Denham, who states that he had 
seen them hunt the Gazelle by the scent with exquisite pre- 
cision, taking short cuts when the animal made a turn, so as 
to come again upon the track. Africa, then, abounds in Dogs 
of various kinds, and which we have as much reason to be- 
lieve indigenous to the regions they inhabit, as those of the 
Asiatics are to the continent where they are found. During 
the intercourse carried on beyond all memorial of tradition 
and history between the people of Africa and Europe, it is 


not possible that the dogs of the one people should not have 


been communicated to the other’; and thus we may believe 
that, with the mixed varieties of dogs with which we are con- 
versant in Europe, the blood of the African as well as the 
Asiatic races has been mingled. 

The ever ingenious and eloquent Buffon eagerly maintain- 
ed that the Shepherd’s Dog, which, from its habits, he sup- 
posed to be the nearest to the native type of the species, was 
the original of all the dogs known to us. But the Shepherd’s 
Dog differs in different countries as much as the other dogs 
of the same countries. The Shepherd’s Dog referred to by 
the French naturalist is that of France, which is merely a 
variety of the dogs of shepherds, although agreeing in many 
characters with those of other parts of Europe. But this 
variety resembles the Wolf much more nearly than it re- 
Sembles such dogs as the Spaniel, the Mastiff, and Grey- 


hound ; and it is surely more reasonable to believe that it is 


derived from the Wolf, which it resembles, than that it is 
the parent stock of Dogs which it does not resemble. Were 
the theory good, we must suppose that this species assumes 
in Siberia characters so like a Wolf that it cannot be dis- 
tinguished from one, in Thibet the characters of a Mastiff, 


Sania 


ee ee ae a es 


nn 


664 THE DOG. 


in England of a Bull-dog, in Malta of a dog little larger 
than a rabbit, in another country of a Hound, in another of 
a Greyhound, and so forth; and that even in the very same 
country which itself inhabits, all these different forms of the 
Dog may exist from age to age, with as little tendency to 
change as in the case of the Shepherd's Dog itself. The 
theory of the French naturalist is unsupported by a single 


fact known in natural Science, and would Scarcely merit 
notice, were it not that it has been followed by many subse- 
quent writers, and that even yet there are naturalists who 
give it a tacit support. Much, indeed, must be ascribed to 
the effects of climate, food, and domestication, in modifying 
/ the characters of the Dog ; but it is plain that we ascribe to 
/ these agencies far more than the case requires, when we as- 


sume that such a dog as the Shepherd's Dog of France, liv- 
ing no more in the state of nature than many others, can 
“ have been the root of them all; that in England it may be a 
“Bull-dog, in the Pyrenees an animal so like a wolf as not to 
be distinguishable from one, and in the country which itself 
inhabits, a Matin or a Poodle. . 

The latest theory regarding the origin of the Dog, is that 
which derives all Dogs from the Buansa of Nepaul, thence 
termed Canis primevus. But the Hound of N epaul merits 
still less the distinction of being the progenitor of all dogs 
than the Shepherd’s Dog of France. For we must suppose 

that this hound has given origin to an animal so unlike itself 
as this very Shepherd’s Dog, that in Siberia it has become a 
Sledge-dog, and in Malta a Shock-dog; nay, that in the very 
region which itself inhabits, it may become a Mastiff and a 
Terrier, both of which inhabit the mountainous country of 
Nepaul, apparently as constant in their proper characters as 
the Wild Hound of the same country. 

Another hypothesis, greatly more reasonable, indeed, but 

_ yet very far from answering the conditions of the problem to 
be resolved, is, that all dogs are derived from the Common 
Wolf. That certain dogs, perhaps the most useful of any, 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. ; 665 


are derived from the Common Wolf, must be admitted, un- 
less we are to reject evidence which, in every branch of . | 


1 ERR ety eam, OF 


natural science, would be received. But there is more than 
one species of Wolf, and there are other wild canidz which 
we may term Wolves, which are equally fitted to submit | 
themselves to the influence of domestication. The Prairie | . 4 
Dog, or the Prairie Wolf, has been domesticated, as well as 
the Aguaras of America; the Dingo of New Holland has 
been tamed by the rudest savages, and is one of the dogs of | 
China and Japan; the Dholes of India have been domesti- 
cated, and, we can scarcely doubt, the Hounds of Nepaul ; 
and the dogs of Africa are very numerous, and must be be- 
lieved to have been derived from the Canide proper to that | 
continent. If we assume, then, the Common Wolf to have 
been the origin of all dogs, we must equally assume it tobe 1 
the parent stock of all the wild species of canide which have _ a 


atin eene an Ah RP, ee 


been subdued,—of the Prairie and Aguara dogs of America, | Bs I 


of the Dingo of the Eastern Islands, of the Dholes of India, 
and of the numerous species which have yielded dogs to the | : 
inhabitants of Africa. The Common Wolf is certainly the | | 
_ parent stock of numerous dogs of the northern hemisphere; / 

but, ‘unless we are to assert that it is the parent stock like- | 

wise of many canide which we hold to be specifically dis- | | 
tinct from one another, and from the Wolf, we cannot ad-/ / 


Another theory is, that the primal type of the Dog is lost, | , 
and that it is from some one species now extinct that all 2 
the varieties of the existing races have sprung. ~ But this vi 


mit it to be the parent stock of all domesticated dogs. iA; \ 


hypothesis involves us in suppositions which we are unable | i. if 
to support by any truths known, or which can ever be known 7 hi 
to us, in natural history. For, admitting this hypothesis, |  _ ie | 


we must believe that the primal type of the Dog, whatever it - 
be, is likewise the type of the Wolf, and that thus the Wolf 
is Sprung from an animal which we suppose to have resem- 
bled the domestic dogs. It is true that there may have been, 
although we never can have a knowledge of the fact, some 


Le TES ESE SE EE AEE 


666 THE DOG. 


animal, in a previous distribution of living forms, from which 
all existing Canide have been derived, the Wolf, the Jackal, 
the Fox, and others, with all their varieties ; but this, it 
is manifest, is a theory founded upon no basis of known 
truths. We cannot say how Species were formed, and must 
wander in the regions of absolute conjecture, when we ven- 


ture to assume that some one Species, in a former distribu- 
tion of living beings, gave origin to animals now distinct 
from one another, as the Wolf, the Jackal, and the Fox. 
This may have been, nay, probably was; but when we at- 
tempt to investigate the origin of the Dog and such animals, 
it is useless for us to go farther than animal forms, as they 
are exhibited. to us in living species or remains. All that 
we can hope to determine regarding the origin of Dogs is, 
from what species, one or more, now existing, or whose re- 
mains exist, they have been derived. If we assume that 
Some primal species of dog existed, we must assume that 
this species gave origin to the Wolf, as well as to every spe- 
cies of Canis which has been domesticated. 

There are, then, insuperable difficulties in the supposition 


‘A of the origin of all the various races of Dogs from any one 


species. But knowing, as we do, that many species of Canis 
exist in the wild state, and have been domesticated, and that 
all the domesticated Canide, so far ag is known, breed with 
one another; that tribes and nations of men have been 
mingled together by migration, conquest, or otherwise, from 
the remotest ages of the world; it is reasonable to believe 
that different kinds of dogs, the inhabitants of different coun- 
tries, have been mingled together in blood. It is in this 
way, and in this way alone, that we can satisfactorily ac- 
count for those endless varieties which the races of dogs of 
long-peopled countries present, and the constancy with which 
certain races preserve the characters proper to them, dis- 
tinct from others produced, under the same conditions, from 
age to age. ; 

The subjugation of the various races of Dogs, may well be 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 667 ill 


regarded as one of the most useful triumphs which reason a 
has been permitted to gain over the instincts and habits | 

of the lower tribes of animals. We may believe, too, that nt | 
it was effected during the earliest periods of society, since | 
we can hardly conceive communities to have existed at all ) | 
in wild countries without such assistants, and since we | 

scarcely know a tribe, from the Esquimaux of the Arctic 
wilderness to the savages of New Holland, so rude as not . i 
to have appropriated the dogs of the countries they in- WI | 


habit. We may say that there is no period in the past i 
history of our species, of which we have any knowledge ; i | 
at all, in which the Dog did not exist in the subjugated All | 


state. We find him represented to us as a sign in the 
heavens along with the Bull, the Ram; and the Goat, his 1 
early fellows in the service of our race, nay, distinguished | | 
from these by being placed in both hemispheres of the fir- aa 
mament, first beneath the feet of Orion in the southern hemi- 
sphere, and again in the northern, where he indicates the 3 i 
place of Sirius, the brightest of the fixed stars of the firma- ih 
ment, from the heliacal rising of which, corresponding with | | 
the extreme rise of the Nile, the Ethiopians and Egyptians i] 
dated the commencement of their year. He is sculptured on 
the earliest monuments of human arts, from the sacred caves 
of the East, to the proud structures of Persepolis and the 
i@ Nile. By the Egyptians he was consecrated to their god 
Anubis, whom they represented with the figure of a man | , | | 
and the head of a dog; and he enters into a mass of symbo- . 
i lical representations, whose meaning cannot now be disco- : i | 
| vered. - Nor was the adoration of the Dog confined to this | | 
singular people, so prone, like most of the African nations, ie 
to pay a blind worship to the objects of the senses, but it He | 
extended to almost all the members of the family termed en 
Caucasian. He was everywhere sacrificed to the gods; and 
traces of the same rites have been found in people so remote t 
as the worshippers of Brahma, the Phceenician Canaanites, ie 
and the Teutons of Northern Europe, the latter, up to a pe- 


668 THE DOG. 


riod which may be called historical, making use of the Dog, 
as of other victims, in their bloody worship. He entered 
into the mythological systems of Greece and Rome ; and even 
in the superstition of the vulgar of Europe to the present 
day, usages connected with the worship of the Dog may be 
traced. One exception, and that a remarkable one, occurred 
in early times, and has exercised a Singular action on the 
condition of the Dog over a. great part of the world. The 
worship of the Dog was interdicted to the J ews, with dread- 
ful denunciations. He was proclaimed to be unclean; and 
even the price which might be received for him was placed 
on a level with the wages of a harlot, and was not to pollute 
the temple of the Living God. The people of this family, ad- 
hering to the letter of their stern law amidst all the fortunes 
of their unhappy race, even now retain much of their ancient 
feelings towards this gift of Providence. Nay more, the 
Arabs, taught by an Impostor, who derived much of what he 
taught from Jewish usages, have conceived something of the 
same feelings towards this creature. But the Arabs cannot 
dispense with the services of the Dog amid their own wild 
deserts of sand, and much less when they have passed be- 
yond them; and all the restraints of Superstition have been 
unable to prevent the freest use of the dog in the countries 
to which the Arabian faith has extended. Yet everywhere, 
in countries of Mohammedang, the Dog is regarded as some- 
thing unhallowed and unclean. The True Believer, indeed, 
will not shed the blood of the Dog, but he will not afford him 
the shelter of his dwelling, nor admit him to that companion- 
ship for which Nature has fashioned him. Hence, in Moham- 
medan countries, the Dog rarely assumes that docility which 
he elsewhere possesses; and hence much of that multiplica~ 
tion of unowned dogs in Eastern towns which live on garbage, 
and share with the hyenas and vultures the task of remoy- 
ing impurities. This, indeed, is due only in part to Moham- 
medan feeling ; for we know that something of the same 
kind existed from the earliest times in the countries of the 


4 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 669 


East, even in Egypt, where the Dog was venerated, and in 
Greece during the ages termed Heroic. It is generally be- 
lieved that the Hindoos have acquired the feelings of their 
Mohammedan tyrants towards the Dog: but this is an error. 
The Hindoos, like other people of the East, have nume- 
rous unowned dogs in their towns, but the Hindoos, though 
restrained by feelings connected with their ideas of the 
sanctity of food, from admitting the dog to that familiarity 
which is customary with us, have a great fondness for the 
Dog, in which respect they resemble all the other members 
of the Caucasian family not Mohammedan. It is the Jews 
and Mohammedans alone who regard this animal as some- 
thing unhallowed; but it is not they alone who vilify their 
enemies as dogs and the sons of dogs. For, the people of 
all countries, even those who profit the most by the services 
. of the animal, employ expressions of hatred and contempt, 
founded on what they conceive to be the most vile and hate- 
ful in his attributes. His greediness, his uncleanness, his 
impudence, his quarrelsome temper, nay, his submission and 
fawning, have furnished us with epithets wherewith to insult 
one another. The cause, perhaps, lies no deeper than this, 
that the Dog living in our society, we are able to observe his 
habits and actions, and perhaps to find in them too faithful a 
similitude of some of our own. Were monkeys to live 
amongst us, we should doubtless be able to find in them 
some traits of character which we might apply to our neigh- 
bours, and go be as ready to speak of the son of a Monkey 
as the son of a Dog. 

To the Domestic Dog, we have innumerable references in 
almost every kind of writings, from the songs of the people 
to the disquisitions of the naturalist. and metaphysician, and 
even treatises have been devoted to the subject, of ancient 
date, of which some, in whole or in part, have come down 
to us. Of these the most remarkable are the Cynegetica 
of Xenophon, who lived 445 years before Christ, and Ar- 
rian, who flourished in the reigns of Hadrian and the An- 


\ 


PO rece 


sm entoermeneumeren 


- ae 
Pee ee an amma 


RAEI RI Da RRR SOARES 


IRI a epee oe 


mecenetencc NASA ENTT 


670 ; THE DOG. 


tonini. But the ancients give us little information with re- 
spect to what may be called the Natural History of the Dog, 
and almost all their notices refer to his properties and ser- 
vices chiefly as an instrument of the chase. They had their 
swift-footed Dogs, Canes Celeres, which they employed in cour- 
sing; their Canes Sagaces, comprehending the dogs employed 
to track the game by the scent; their Canes Bellicosi, or dogs 
employed in the destruction of the larger animals, and in 
war. Their methods of chase appear to have been the same 
as prevailed in a later age, up to the general use of fire- 
arms. ‘They pursued the practice of tracking the game in 
the woods, and rousing it from its retreats, by hounds which 
followed the scent, and of running it down by the swifter 
dogs; and, in fowling, they employed dogs, such as the 
modern spaniels, to drive the feathered game into nets or 
other snares. They employed powerful dogs to defend their 
herds and flocks ; and the « Cave Canem” on the portals of the 
Roman houses, shews that the Same means were employed to 
protect goods from plunder as in the present day. The Dog 
_ was used by the Romans for food, as it still is, but far more 
extensively, by the Chinese and other Eastern Asiatics, by the 
inhabitants of the Polynesian Islands, and by the Negroes. 
Dogs, we are informed, were largely employed by the Cel- 
tic Gauls and other barbarians in war, and even up toa later 
age, the same cruel instrument of destruction was not dis- 
used. The Spaniards made use of dogs against the helpless 
natives of South America, and even the Tudor Princes of 
England, we are informed, employed them in their Irish 
wars; and the traces of the practice long existed in the Bor- 
der districts of England and Scotland, in the use of blood- 
hounds, trained to the chase of human victims. The use 
- of fire-arms put an end to these ag to many barbarous usages, 
and dogs at length were only employed in war, in & man- 
ner in which they may be lawfully used, that is lawfully, So 
long as the destruction of our fellow-creatures is regarded 
as lawful, namely, as sentinels to give warning of danger. 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. : 671 


For this purpose they were kept in all the ancient fortresses, 
as they still are in the countries of the East. The Romans, 
every year, with characteristic brutality, whipped a dog to 
death, in memory of an event, which probably never hap- 
pened,—the saving of their Capitol by the cackling of Seane 
while the dogs slept at their posts. 

The names applied to the Dog differ so much in the various 
languages of Asia-and Europe, that no relation can be traced 
between most of the designations ; and yet there are cases 
of widely-spread languages, in which we can trace a com- 
mon root in names applied to the animal. He is the Ci and 
Cu, pronounced Ki and Ku, of the Celtic Britons, the Kubb 
of the Arabs, the xvw of the Greeks, the Canis of the Latins ; 
terms, again, which are found in innumerable derivatives ap- 
plied to countries, tribes, n nations, and divinities. The Eng-. 

lish term Dog is derived from the German Dogge; but the 
Dog is properly the Hund of the Germans, whence the Anglo- 
Saxon Hounde, and the English Hound. 

The female of the dog goes with young sixty-three days, 
but with a slight variation within this period, dependent 
upon temperament and. race. She sometimes receives, when 


in heat, more than one male, and it has been Supposed that 
puppies resembling the different males have been produced — 


in the same litter ; which may perhaps be ascribed to the 
tendency observed in the female of the Dog as well as of 
some other animals, even the Mare, to reproduce in their 
subsequent offspring animals resembling the previous ones. 
The female of the Dog, when she is not under restraint, ( 


makes selection of her mate, the mastiff selecting the mastiff, ‘a 


the terrier the terrier, and so on. The puppies are born 
with the eyelids closed by a membrane, which divides about 
the tenth day. The mother nourishes her young with un- 
ceasing fondness, and, when they have acquired sufficient 
strength, leads them forth, and teaches them to chase, to 
worry, and usually the habits proper to her peculiar race. 
She gradually weans them by refusing to yield them milk, 


tins 


Saas e-. 
SsaeSEENNENDENeEDNceeee oeeeeteremer ee 


i No Se Nina n fone eal 


rer ae 


<A MERON Ulsan 


seem a pemeee 


PTAC YERERTOERE NP SNS te NRRIRNNEDL angR=aEEN 


Ce AAO cee nom sw 


SE ASS AEE 


3 672 | THE DOG. 


and when they have left her, no other tie than between any 
other dogs seems to exist between the members of the 
family. It is common to destroy the young puppies which 
are not to be brought up, by drowning them. The mother 
has been seen to search the neighbouring pools, and, hav- 
ing found her little ones, to bring them to her couch, and 
fondle them with anxious moanings. When the destruction 
of the entire litter has been more than once repeated, the 
anxious mother has been known to carry off her whelps as 
Soon as born and conceal them, stealing to them from time 
to time to suckle them. A mother deprived of her own cubs 
has been known to steal one or more of the young of another 
and suckle them, nay, to nurse the young of other animals, 
as the fox, the rabbit, the cat, and treat them with the same 
tenderness as her natural offspring. . 

The form and habits of Dogs vary in every degree with 
race, and the habitudes to which the parent stock has been 
long inured. A race of dogs accustomed to follow a parti- 
cular kind of game communicates the like propensities to 
the offspring. The Pointer, inured from generation to gene- 
ration to steal on birds, and stand when he approaches them, 
communicates the same propensity to his progeny, who 
scarcely require even discipline to teach them the arts of the 
/ parents. The Wolf-hound communicates to his young an 
instinctive antipathy to the Wolf, which reappears even after 
several generations. The Terrier who has been used to the 
chase of the polecat or any other of the weasel tribe, com- 
municates to his descendants his own fierce hatred to the 
same animals, which the whelp will manifest the moment he 
comes upon the track, although he may never before have 
Seen one of the species; while the young of the Cocker 
manifests no antipathy to the same kinds of animals, though 
it will pursue with ardour the scent of the woodcock or phea- 
sant. A puppy of the breed of the Great Dog of St Bernard’s 
will follow the track of human footsteps on the snow, al- 
though it may have been brought to a distant country from 


2 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES: OFS 


its mother’s breast. A Shepherd’s Dog, of a race inured to 
the care of flocks of sheep, communicates to its young its 
own habits, so that the latter only require a little educa- 
tion to teach them their duties. But if the parents have been 

taken to another employment, as the driving of herds of 
cattle, their young have no such aptitude to learn, and fre-. 
quently require long and painful discipline to bring back the 
pristine habits of the breed. Hence a rule, universally appli- 
cable to the breeding of dogs for any Specific purpose, is to 
breed from those of a pure race, whose habits have been im- 
printed upon it from generation to generation. 

Although discipline will do much to impress peculiar ha- | 
bitudes on dogs, yet Race has a still greater influence. The 
Mastiff, of a peculiar breed having great muscular strength, | 
has remarkable habits of watchfulness, which his young exer- 
cise instinctively, and without any instruction. We can 
teach the mastiff many things, even to diving in water, and 
the pursuing of human beings, but we cannot teach him to fol- 
low the hare like a greyhound by the eye, to hunt in concert, 
using the voice, like the hound, or to adopt the habits of the 
terrier in discovering the retreat of the polecat and the badger. 
The Barbet or Water-Dog will hunt the margins of the lake | 
or river for water-fowl, and swim and dive to bring the | 
quarry which has been wounded or killed, but he will not, | 
like the terrier, attack an animal of five times his own | 
strength, or encounter the bite of the badger and fox in their 
subterranean dwellings. We can teach him a multitude of 
feats for our gratification, just as we can teach a monkey to 
walk on two legs, and imitate human actions; but there are 
limits to our efforts, in the physical powers and tempera- 
ment of the animal himself, which we cannot pass. There 
are thus races of dogs which are endowed with peculiar 
faculties and powers, which we can cultivate to a Surprising 
extent, and which we can even cause to react, by continual 
use, on the conformation of the animals, who, nevertheless, 
will still retain the essential characters of their race. Fur- 

2U 


vec nt rma 


or PE 


pom 


ETI ae RENEE on 


cs 
eae 


cone ea pees oT = 


heen eres aero 


«6674 THE DOG. 


ther, we have an increase of power over the services of the 
Dog, by the races being endowed with the power of breed- 
ing with one another, so that we can form a breed, or produce 
individuals, partaking of the attributes of both the parents. 
Thus, by uniting a mastiff with a greyhound, we can pro- 
cure individuals combining in a certain degree the speed of 
the one with a portion of the physical strength of the other, 
forming a Wolf-Dog, or dog suited to the chase of the wolf: 
by uniting a terrier with a hound or barbet, we shall form 
an Otter-Hound, or dog fitted for the chase of the otter, and 
Soon. In this manner, numerous mixed races have been 
produced fitted for particular services. 

The Dog appears to have the faculty, beyond any known 
animal, of becoming adapted, even in the conformation of his 
body, to the services and actions to which he is inured. A 


, race of dogs employed from generation to generation in the 
— dragging of loads, has the size and muscular strength in- 
| ereased; while another, employed in no service which requires 


enlargement of the muscles, becomes smaller and smaller, 
until it is suited to its permanent condition. A race of Grey- 
hounds, employed in the chase of the Stag, acquires the 
strength and energy suited to this service; while another, em- 
ployed in the chase of the Hare, acquires a form by which the 
individuals can turn more quickly, and reach with their teeth 
the victim on the ground; and further, if the same race be 
withdrawn altogether from the pursuits natural to it, and 
be reared up as a plaything in our dwellings, it becomes a 
lap-dog, as in the case of the little Italian Greyhound. The 


‘ ‘Spaniel is a dog of some size in the countries proper to it: 
| in the houses of the opulent, brought up as a lap-dog, it be- 
' eomes a dwarf. The Great Wolf-Dog of Ireland has now 


nearly disappeared, in a great degree, because the wolves, 
his appropriate prey, having been extirpated, there is little 
inducement to cultivate the breed; but partly, and we may 
believe mainly, because, being no longer employed in his for- 
mer pursuits, he ceases to be adapted to them, and his mus- 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 675 


cular development approaches to that of common dogs. The 
utmost care, it is known, has been used by opulent indivi- 
duals to keep up this magnificent breed; but in spite of 
every attention, the animals, from generation to generation, 
have diminished in strength and stature, so that they can 
now be scarcely recognised as being of the ancient race: and 
there is not a breed of dogs, from the Wolf-Dog to the Spa- 
niel, in which we do not find varieties of size, for which we 
can assign no other cause than the difference in the purposes 
to which the physical ibis: and faculties of the animals 
- are applied. 

The Dog has his habits affected in a wonderful degree by 
those of the people afmongst whom he lives. It was an old 
remark, that one might judge of the civilization of a people 
by their dogs. Amongst savages, the Dog is rude, treacher- 
ous, and vihdictive. He will snatclr at the food in his mas- 
ter’s hand, and purloin it from his stores; he will steal be- 
hind the unwary stranger, and bite him; and he will remem- 
ber an injury, and avenge it. The dogs of the Esquimaux 
_ will often, in revenge for the treatment they receive, endea- 
vour to overturn the sledge of their master, or break it to 
pieces by running down a precipice, or drag it into a pool. 
Amongst mere barbarians, as the nomadic tribes of Asia, the 
dog is fierce and inexorable like his human instructors. The 
large dogs employed to guard the tents of the Arabs and 
Turcomans, will rush upon the helpless traveller and drag 
him to the ground. Still more rude and savage are those 
dogs of the Turkish towns which are left without protection, 
disowned and shunned by every one, and compelled to share 
with hyenas and vultures their miserable food. These dogs 
are the pest of the Mohammedan towns. In Constantinople 
a stranger cannot pass through the foul and narrow streets, 
even at noon, without the hazard of being wounded. At 
night he cannot do so without the risk of being torn to 
pieces. These creatures stand in some awe of the: club of 
the Believer ; but the “ Christian Dog” who should venture 


676. THE DOG. 


amongst them after sunset without a light and guards, might 
as well pass through a crowd of wolves. These animals, ac- 
customed to prey on human bodies left in the streets, will 
devour the stranger whom they may happen to master, as 
readily as they would a kid or a lamb. If a strange dog 
ventures amongst them, they will, in an instant, surround 
him and tear him to pieces; or, should one of their number 
fall down from wounds or fatigue, his fellows will set upon 
him on the instant and devour him. Yet these rude dogs, 
in the absence of human protection, have devised something 
like laws of their own. Each community has its own quar- 
ter of the city; and should a straggler from another quarter 
enter it, he will in a few minutes be surrounded and torn by 
a hundred mouths. But should he be happy enough to escape 
over his own frontier, he turns fiercely round upon his assail- 
ants, knowing that he will be immediately supported. It is 
in the Mohammedan towns that the worst of these hateful 
dogs are now found ; but the nuisance seems to have existed 
in every age in the same countries. How many are the allu- 
sions in ancient writers to the fate of enemies to be thrown 
to the dogs to be devoured! Even Hector promises his Tro- 
jans that the body of their bravest enemy Shall be given to 
the dogs of Troy ; and who does not remember the pleading 
of the noble Hector himself, when, pierced by the fatal spear 
of Achilles, he finds words to deprecate the same cruel fate! 


“ By thine own life, by theirs who gave thee birth, 
And by thy knees, oh! let not Grecian Dogs 
Rend and devour me : 


and the inexorable reply,— 


“ Dog! neither knees nor parents name to me, 
so true it is and sure 
That none shall save thy carcass from the Dogs.” 


In the cities and villages of India, are likewise numerous 
outcast dogs ; but, living amongst a mild race of people, 


they have nothing of the savage temperament of those of the 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 677 


Turkish towns. They are termed Pariahs by Europeans, sup- 
posed to be from misapprehension of the Hindoo word Paraeea 
or strange,'as if an Englishman, on asking a native what 
dog this was, the answer should be Paraeea, it is a strange 
dog: but this term must not be confounded with the Hindoo 
term Paharee, which is applied to dogs or anything proper _ 
to mountains, as the Wild Hounds of Nepaul. These Pa- | 
riah dogs are of all races, though, breeding together, they 
acquire something like a community of characters. They 
are, in truth, nothing else but the domesticated dogs of the 
country suffered to live and multiply in the streets. Although 
they have no individual masters, they will fawn upon the 
stranger who looks kindly upon them, and attach themselves 
to his service. An English gentleman, Colonel Smith in- 
forms us, travelling in a palanquin, a pariah dog, fainting with 
thirst and hunger, looked him wistfully in the face, as if im- 
ploring suceour. The dog strove to follow the palanquin ; but, 
the bearers passing rapidly on, his strength failed him, and . 
he laid himself down to die. 

The Dog has the senses of hearing and smell acute in a 
surpassing degree. He hears the distant footstep, and dis- 
tinguishes the tread of his master and friend. But of his 
senses, that of smell appears to be the most perfect. The mem- 
brane which lines the nasal organ, and on which the olfac- 
tory nerve is spread, is of surprising extent. If spread out it 
would envelop a great part of the body of the animal, whereas, 
in the human subject, it would not cover the head. Endowed 
with this sense in a surpassing degree, the Dog can follow 
the evanescent traces of his prey by the odour left on the 
ground. He can distinguish the smell of different animals, 
_and pursue those which he is instructed to chase, and neglect 
those which he is not permitted to follow. The older Stag- 
hounds of England, which were employed to rouse the game 
in woods, could distinguish, by the scent alone, the full- 
grown hart from the fawns too young to be hunted, or from 
the female when out of the season of the chase. A dog has 


678 THE DOG. 


been known to follow the footsteps of his master through a 
city where he had never before been. The ancient Blood- 
hound, when put upon the track of his human victim, would 
pursue it whatever steps might have crossed the path. The 
Dog, when he meets any person from whom he has been long 
separated, begins to smell him so as to assist the eye by his 
recollection of odour, indicating alike the delicacy of his sense 
of smell and his power of memory. When dogs meet they 
smell one another, the glands with which they are furnished 
giving off an odour, which probably conveys some intimation 
of temper or other feeling from one to the other. 

The Dog is endowed with the faculty of remembering 
places, times, and events. He knows the path which he has 


once travelled, and can retrace it after an interval of years; 


nay, he possesses the faculty of being able to find his way 
to a known place by a route different from that which he had 
before travelled. A little Spaniel, reared on the banks of 
the Tweed, was shipped to London at a sea-port town more 
than twenty miles distant from his home. After an absence 
of twenty days, he arrived at his former residence. He had 
found his way through the enormous city, and over a tract of 
country of more than 300 miles in which he had never once 
been. A dog can count intervals of time with surprising ac- 
curacy. If he is used to perform any act which gives him 
pleasure, or which from habit becomes a duty, on a certain 
day of the week, and at a certain hour of that day, he knows 
the hour as it comes round to a minute. How he calculates 
the intervening time is unknown, but the instances are in- 
numerable in which dogs of every race will perform this kind 
of reckonir g with the exactness of a clock.* 


* Tt was an old practice of the shepherds of the south of Scotland to be ac- 
companied by their dogs on Sabbath morn to the parish church. The dogs 
knew the day and the hour of setting forth as well as their masters. During 
the time of the service they usually conducted themselves with great decorum, 
but when, at the conclusion of it, the congregation rose from their. seats, accord- 
ing to the practice of the Scottish Church, to receive the parting benediction of 
the pastor, the dogs likewise started on their feet, and, more audibly than con- 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. - 679 


- Dogs, having the senses in great perfection, probably en- 
joy the mere feeling of existence in a degree which we can- 
not estimate. They manifest the utmost pleasure when they 
are permitted to exercise their natural powers. Dogs of 
chase exhibit intense delight when brought to the hunting-_ 
field, and pursue the sport to the last with an ardour which 
even stripes and the harshest words cannot abate. The 
Terrier delights to be exposed to the attacks of the fierce 
animals with which he is made to contend, and, though 
cruelly maimed, returns again and again to the charge. The 
Setter bounds with joy when he sees the fowling-piece in the 
hands of his master, and is conducted by him to the fields, 
although he shares no part of the spoil, and is frequently 
subjected to the severest discipline, to restrain his natural 
ardour, and prevent his running upon the game. Yet he 
will run upon it again and again, although knowing well 
that he will be subjected to punishment. He will run at 
the forbidden hare, and when he has fruitlessly pursued it 
for a little space, return, and crouch at the feet of his mas- 
ter, that he may receive the castigation which he knows 
awaits him. We cannot ascribe this to anything else but 
the excessive feeling of enjoyment to the animal which the 
exercise of his natural powers affords him. Even when the 
dog is put to tasks of severe labour, he sensibly manifests 
the pleasure he receives. <A blacksmith taught his dog to 


sisted with the sanctity of the place, expressed their satisfaction at the approach- 
ing release, so that the concluding words of the clergyman were generally lost 
in the hubbub. ‘The device was thought of, of allowing the congregation to 
sit quietly in their seats while the blessing was pronounced. But the dogs 
were rarely to be thus taken in. Somehow or other they contrived to find 
out that the service was at an end, and, by a sympathetic whimpering, 
announced that they were not sorry to be set at liberty. Later clergymen 
endeavoured to put a stop to the ancient practice, and the dogs were ordered 
to be left at home. To this end, however, it was necessary that they should 
be confined by a suitable halter when the day came round, They knew this 
full well, and even to this day the dogs in some of the pastoral districts of 
Scotland contrive to keep out of reach betimes, taking their place at some con- 
venient distance on the road, so as to join the family circle in its progress. 


680 THE DOG. 


work the bellows, which he did with zeal, watching with im- 
patience for the signal to begin. The little dogs taught 
to turn spits, before the modern refinement of jacks, used 


to attend at the minute when the cook was ready, and set 
themselves to work the wheel without a murmur. The dogs 


seedy sieht ail Delbaere hed Ries 


of waggoners, fastened to the carriage, will be seen, pulling 


with all their force, from morning to night. Many of us 
have seen the dogs which are harnessed to little trucks and 
carriages, dragging their load along through mud and clouds 
of dust, with unceasing ardour and seeming enjoyment. In 
the towns of Holland these curious little teams may be seen 
in almost every street, the dogs sleek, fat, and seemingly con- 


tented. It may be suggested to politicians of our own coun- 
try, who are ready to put down these harmless vehicles by 
Act of Parliament, that if they are to legislate for the pro- 
tection of dogs, it should be for those which they themselves 
cause to be deprived of freedom of motion, chained to posts 
at the doors of their mansions, and compelled to linger out 
a miserable life in captivity, rather than for those which are 
permitted to exercise their natural powers for our service. 
The Dog has the sense of sight in a degree sufficient to 
see objects well in the dark. He can discriminate colours, 
although we do not know what feelings the impression of the 
different colours excites. If a set of little light balls be 
each coloured, as black, red, blue, green, a dog, taught to 
carry, will bring the black, the red, the blue, or the green, 
as he may be directed by the voice, so that he not only dis- 
tinguishes colours, but associates them with sounds. I¢ is 
even said that the dog has been taught to carry coloured 
letters to specified houses or places according to the colour 
of each. If this be so, it renders conceivable the Singular 
accounts that have been given of dogs having been taught to 
distinguish certain cards in a pack, and even to play certain 
simple mechanical games. The tricks that dogs can be 
taught by jugglers are very remarkable, after making every 
allowance for the deception practised by the juggler himself, 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 681 


as by his directing the dog by signs not observed by the spec- 
tators. Dogs have again and again been taught to perform 
little pantomimes. They have been made to attack and de- 
fend a mimic fortress, to pretend to be wounded or killed, 
to limp, and allow themselves to be dragged about by their 


fellows as if dead. This will not appear incredible when it 


is known that even horses have been taught feats of the 
same kind. Several years ago, at Astley’s, a horse might be 
seen to imitate to the life the actions of a bull, and go through 
all the representation of a bull-fight. Covered with skins, . 
and supplied with horns, he imitated the very gait of the 
animal. When assailed by mimic darts, he atfected rage, 
rushed upon the combatants, pursuing them round the ring, 
and finally fell down as if mortally wounded. Yet the Dog 
immeasurably exceeds the Horse in the readiness with which 
he receives instruction of any kind. Many have seen little 
dogs, especially of the barbet or poodle kind, performing a 
number of curious actions, as begging for food, ringing a 2 
bell, carrying their master’s slippers and other parts of dress 
to him in the morning, and so on; and these things are not 
unworthy of note, as shewing the power of the animal to 
connect certain actions with the words addressed to him. 
Dogs learn to answer to their names, nay, know the names 
of their fellows, for if any one will carefully observe a num- 
ber of dogs kept together, he will see that when any one of 
their companions is called, the others know which of them is 
expected to answer. Itis but a further exercise of the same 
faculty, that dogs comprehend the meaning of short sentences 


addressed to them, as the various orders of the hunting- 


field. But few are perhaps aware how extensive this class 
of phrases really is. The shepherd almost seems to hold a 
continued converse with his dogs as he directs them in their 
various duties. In communicating with the familiar dogs 
within our houses, we shall be surprised at the number of 
verbal directions we give them almost without our being con- 


682 THE DOG. 


scious of doing so. It is difficult to believe that a dog can 
comprehend what is said, unless the sentences are very short, 
especially addressed to him, and frequently repeated in con- 
nexion with the actions which he is expected to perform. 
Yet there are cases in which the dog seems to gather some- 
thing of the purport even of connected sentences. Mr Hoge, 
well known as the Ettrick Shepherd, mentions a curious case 
of this kind. He had resolved to go, on the following day, 
to the house of a friend, many miles distant. He mentioned 
his intention to the old dame, his mother, adding, “ But I 
will not take Hector with me, for he is constantly quarrelling 
with the rest of the dogs, singing music, or breeding some 
uproar.” ‘These were all the words, he says, that passed on 
his part; but Hector had comprehended enough to know 
that he was to be made a prisoner in the morning; and 
when the time for Securing him came, he was nowhere to be 
found. ‘The Yarrow,” says Mr Hogg, “ was so large as 
to be quite impassable, so that I had to go up by St Mary’s 
Loch, and go across by the boat; and on drawing near to 
Bowerhope, I soon perceived that matters had gone precisely 
as I expected. Large as the Yarrow was, and it appeared 
impassable by any living creature, Hector had made his 
escape early in the morning, had swum the river, and was 
sitting, like a drookit hen, on a knoll at the east end of 
the house, awaiting my arrival with much impatience.”* 
The older shepherds of Scotland, it is to be observed, uni- 


versally believe that their dogs have the power of compre- 


* Shepherds’ Calendar by James Hogg. The “ singing music,” referred to 
by our author, as one of Hector’s offences, was a propensity not uncommon in 
Dogs of his class, of joining in the psalm tunes, or other music which they 
heard. Mr Hogg being obliged sometimes to supply his father’s place as clerk 
_ or precentor in the parish church, used to be thrown into a fever, whenever 
Hector made his appearance at church; for Hector never failed to join his 
master with all his might when the tune was struck up, and the two together 
So overpowered the lungs of the rest of the congregation, “ that he and I,” 
says Mr Hogg, “seldom got any one to join in the music but ourselves,” 
“I was, time after time,” says he, “ so completely put out of all countenance 
by the brute, that I was obliged to give up my office in disgust,” 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. : 683 


hending what is said, even when the words are not specially 

addressed to them. We must chiefly, however, ascribe their 

power of doirig so in any case to their faculty of minute ob-. 
servation, by which they are enabled to gather something of 

the purport of what is said from the looks and motions of 

the speaker. This faculty of nice observation is in itself 
very remarkable, but yet more is the process of reasoning, if 
we may so term it, by which the animal is able to draw cor- — 
rect inferences from what he observes. 

The story recorded by the illustrious Leibnitz of the dog 
of the Saxon peasant who had been taught by his master, a 
boy, to pronounce certain words, has been long familiar to 
the learned of Europe. From the account given, however, 
it does not appear whether the dog associated any ideas with 
the words which he had been thus painfully taught to articu- 
late; but it is not improbable that he did, since it cannot be 
more difficult for a dog to associate ideas with his own words, 
than with those of another. Something of this power has 
been observed in the case of other animals far inferior in > 
intelligence to the dog. A parrot can readily be taught to 
call for certain things, as a nut, a piece of bread, or a lump 
of sugar; and manifestly connects the sound with the sub- 
stance and the act of bringing it to him. One of these birds, 
long kept at the door of an inn, was in the habit, when a 
stranger arrived, of calling out, waiter, hostler, and so forth, 
as the case might require. A gentleman in Norfolk, now liy- 
ing, kept a pack of fox-hounds, and had a tame Raven, which 
had been taught to pronounce words, as that animal can be 
readily taught to do even more perfectly than the parrot. 
The raven, from being used to hear the huntsman call the 
different hounds by name, as Jupiter, Juno, Ranger, and so 
on, learned to imitate the same sounds; and persons who ob- 
served him closely, were of opinion that he knew the individual 
dogs to which the names were applied. Be this as it may, the 
raven contrived for himself a singular pastime. He used to 
. place himself by the side of a little hole in the door of the ken- 


ees 


SMADSI Erm 


= 


SOLS a ete 


684 | THE DOG. 


nel, and then call the name of any particular hound. The dog, 
answering the call, thrust his nose through the hole, and the 
raven was as prompt to peck it with his sharp beak, so as 
often to draw blood, and send the dog howling away; and he 
always seemed vastly delighted when he succeeded in the 
trick, , 

The Dog is affected by certain notes of music, and espe- 


cially of wind instruments, as the organ and trumpet. He 
will sometimes howl loudly till the music ceases, or the note 
is changed; and he is sometimes affected in the same man- 
ner by causes which are unknown to us, aS when the moon 
shines bright. Dogs have been observed to howl before an 
earthquake, aware, probably, of the movements underneath, 
before the sounds could impress the human ear. Supersti- 
tion, it is well known, has connected the howling of the dog 
with the presage of events, and, above all, with the death of 
friends. - In the latter case, the effect seems due to the dog’s 
nice observation of what he Sees, a8 when he misses any one 
of the household with whom he was familiar, and sees the 
Sad countenances of friends. A dog has been known to lay 
himself upon the grave of hig master, and continue his me- 
lancholy howling until forced from the place. In like man- 
ner, ifthe master of a dog has met with some dreadful acci- 
dent, as the being rendered insensible by falling from his 
horse, his dog has been known to utter loud howlings, indi- 
cative of grief or alarm. 

The Dog, like other quadrupeds, has sounds of the voice, 
expressive of his proper wants and emotions. The cry of 
grief, of joy, of recognition, of defiance, can all be distin- 
guished; and it is wonderful, when we attend to the modu- 
lations of the animal’s voice, how varied they become, accord- 
ing to the exciting cause. The Canid, in the state of na- 
ture, rarely bark, though it is not correct to Say that they 
never do so. Even the fox has been heard to bark ; and the 
peculiar ery of the hound when in chase js heard in certain 


- SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 685 


wild Canidz, as the Jackal, the Dog of Beloochistan, and the 
Prairie Wolf. 

The Dog, by whatever means, has the power of communi- 
cating his wishes and purposes to his fellows. A terrier, 
having discovered a hare in its form, found its way to a neigh- 
bouring house where a greyhound was kept, and brought it 
to the place where the hare was couched. A little dog, re- 
peatedly assailed by another more powerful than himself, 
Set forth in quest of a neighbouring watch-dog to punish the 
aggressor. A dog, whose companion had been caught in a 
gin, has gone in search of others to assist in the release of 
his companion. The followi ring story is told by M. Blaze, 
in his Histoire du Chien, “Three degs belonging, two of 
them to M. G., and one of them to M. P., of Saint Bonnet 
sur Galanne, in the department of Dréme, went out to hunt 
by themselves. One of the dogs followed a rabbit so far 
into a deep burrow, that his escape became impossible. 
The two other dogs strove ineffectually to scrape away the 
earth, so as to relieve their imprisoned companion. They 
returned to their respective masters, worn out and sad, and 
on the following day found means to rejoin one another, and 
again in the evening returned to their respective homes, ha- 
rassed with fatigue, refusing all food, their paws bloody, and 
their bodies covered with dust. For several days this was 
repeated, when one morning, at dawn of day, M. G. was 
awakened by the scratching of dogs at his door. Descend- 
ing, he found the dog which he had given up for lost, weak, 
languishing, and like a skeleton, escorted by his two deliver- 
ers.” But innumerable instances might be cited, in which 
dogs unite for specific ends, in such a manner that no one 
can doubt that the means are possessed by them of communi- 
cating their purposes to one another. | 

The power of observation possessed by these creatures is 
often remarkably evinced. A dog, observing a theft secretly 
committed, has been known to seize the culprit, when no one 
else observed the act. Dogs, it is said; have surmised in- 


686 THE DOG. 


tended crimes, when, to human eye, nothing indicated an 
evil design, When Henry III. of France fell by the dagger 
of a monk, history records that a dog of the household mani- 
fested extraordinary fury towards the assassin as he ap- 
proached his victim, the animal, doubtless, observing some- 


thing in the demeanour of the villain which indicated his 


purpose. ‘The ancients record instances of this kind, which 
they ascribe to supernatural power, and which the moderns 
Sometimes endeavour to explain by assuming the existence 
of some senses in the lower tribes unknown to us ; but the 
more natural hypothesis, in the case of the Dog, is, that his 
acute senses, and surpassing faculty of observation, enable 
him to discover what escapes our cognizance. 

The promptitude and precision with which dogs aan 
means to an end, are worthy of our admiration. A child, 
falling into a river, was hurried down the stream with fright- 
ful rapidity, and in a few moments would have been out of 
reach. A little dog standing near the bank flew to the rescue, 
but instead of swimming to the child in the water, in which 
case his utmost powers would have been unavailing to over- 
take it, he ran farther down, plunged into the Stream, and 
intercepted it. 

When persons are engaged in endeavouring to effect some 
given purpose, it is surprising how quickly dogs divine their 

intentions, and with what sagacity they lend their aid. A dog, 
- Seeing the ineffectual attempts made to communicate with a 
stranded vessel, has seized the rope, and swum with it so 
that the crew might catch it. In one of the mountainous parts 
of Scotland, the only child of a poor peasant had wandered 
from home, lost its way, and strayed farther and farther from 
the path. Night came on, and the anxious parents, assisted 
by their neighbours, searched every corner round and round 
in vain. The search was continued throughout the night, 
and as the miserable parents were about to abandon it in 
despair, they heard the barking of a dog in the distance, 
who, unknown to them, had likewise set out in the search. 


SPECIES AND VARIBTIES. 687 


They hurried forward, and, with feelings not to be expressed, 
beheld the sleeping child, the dog couched beside it, so as to 
protect it from the snow which was then fast falling. 

But volumes might be filled with anecdotes of the sagacity 
which these animals evince, under the different conditions in ~ 
: which their faculties are exercised. In the chase, but espe- 
cially when the animals hunt alone, and are thus permitted 
to exercise their powers uncontrolled, it is seen how admi- 
_ rably they meet the varying arts of their victims, and adapt 
their own actions, singly or in combination with their fel- 
lows, to the cases that arise. The old Lurcher, a crafty 
dog, intermediate between the shepherd’s cur and the grey- 
hound, was the favourite dog of the poachers of the last 
generation. When employed in his unlawful trade, he was 
aware of the necessity of concealment, and used all his arts 
to escape detection for himself and his master. The latter 
concealing himself in some convenient place, the dog entered 
the preserve to be plundered, pursuing the game in dead 
silence, and bringing the booty, as it was secured, faithfully 
to the rendezvous. The Tumbler was a little dog employed 
to plunder rabbit-warrens. ‘He affected indifference to the 
game, and rolling himself about as in play, pounced suddenly 
upon his victims, when thrown off their guard. When two 
were employed, one resorted to the usual arts, while the 
other kept watch at the burrows, to intercept the prey which 
escaped his companion. When dogs of different kinds hunt 
together, they combine their efforts to assist one another ; 
so that, while one is pursuing the game, the others are keep- 
ing watch at the places by which it is likely to pass. The 
Esquimaux dogs are in use to scatter pieces of carrion about, 
so as to lure their game. 

The dog of the Blind Beggar is one whose actions we have 
sometimes the means of observing in this country, but much 
more in those parts of Europe where mendicity is the habit 
of the poorer classes. The dog either conducts his blind 


master to the place where he takes his stand to solicit the 
; Zi 


688 THE DOG. 


pity of the passing crowd, or conducts him from door to door. 


The animal willbe seen to stop at the particular houses where 
alms are wont to be bestowed, sometimes uttering a low 
whine, as if supplicating the attention of the inmates. Where 
there are churches, he makes his way to them at the times 
of the day when they are most frequented. He knows every 
pathway through which he has occasion to pass; and it is 
interesting to observe with what caution he leads his help- 
less master along, avoiding every obstruction, and keeping 
him out of the reach of carriages and other dangerous ob- 
structions. When passing along a river or canal, he keeps 
between the blind man and the bank; and when a path is 
rugged and narrow, he directs his companion along the 
smoother and broader part, himself taking the rougher and 
narrower. When a piece of money is thrown down, he has 
been taught to pick it up; nay, there have been cases in 
which he has been known to carry money to a neighbouring 
. Shop, and exchange it for a loaf, or such article of food as 
the mendicant had been in use to obtain at the same place. 
The Dog can be taught arts of deception ; and although it 
is painful to contemplate this creature made subservient to 
unlawful acts, our admiration of the animal is not the less, 
since it is manifest that the turpitude is not in the dog but 
in his human guide. Dogs have been taught to steal, and 
it is wonderful to what arts they will resort to accomplish 
their purpose and escape detection. In London, a dog was 
lately taught to pilfer little articles of provision from shops 
and stalls, which he managed to do with consummate address. 
He never stood for a moment to gaze at the articles to be 
plundered, but kept moving about until, the owner being off his 
guard, the opportunity presented itself of escaping with the 
prize. Another was disciplined to snatch reticules from the 
hands of ladies when walking, another to seize hats hung up for 
display at the doors of shops, and so on. The employment 
of dogs, in certain parts of the Continent, for smuggling 
prohibited goods across the frontiers, as tobacco, muslin, and 


nen 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 689. 


and small wares of all sorts, has been often described. These 
dogs become aware of the nature of their employment, and 
the arts by which it must be carried on. They watch the 
motions of their enemy the revenue-officer, steal past him 
when the opportunity offers, or conceal themselves until he 
is out of sight. They make their way to the receivers of the 
goods, and when they arrive at the door of the hut or cot- 
tage where they are expected, announce their arrival to the 
inmates. But should the customhouse-officer be on the watch, 
they hide themselves in the neighbouring bushes or hedges 
until they may come forth. Although thousands of these 
dogs are every year destroyed, the trade continues. The 
quantity of goods smuggled in this way across the Rhine 
exceeds belief. It has been necessary for the revenue-offi- — 
cers to procure dogs to detect and circumvent those of the 
smugglers, so that the system has become a war of dog's, 
each class perfect in its own tactics, and zealous in the dis- 
charge of its own duties. But not less remarkable than these 


Smuggling-dogs, were the sheep-stealing dogs of Scotland. 


The offence of sheep-stealing, it is to be observed, prevailed 
to an enormous extent in the south of Scotland during a 
great part of the last century. In all cases the sheep-stealers 
depended upon the sagacity of their dogs. When the stolen 
sheep were intrusted to these animals, they conducted them 
through unfrequented paths, in silence and alone, to the 


places of rendezvous. Very late in the century, a sheep- 


stealer who was tried on various charges for this offence, was 
in almost every case able to prove an alibi. It was proved, 
however, that his dog conducted the stolen sheep to his con- 
federates. So perfect was the animal in his lesson, that when 
his master examined a lot of sheep under pretence of pur- 
chasing them, it sufficed that he pointed out to the dog, by 
secret signs, the particular sheep which he wished to appro- 
priate. The dog, returning in the dead of night, selected them 
from the flock, and brought them to the place appointed. The 
. 2x 


690 THE DOG. 


sheep-stealer was condemned to die, and, proh pudor! the 
matchless dog, whose only crime was his fidelity. 

The Dog knows when he has committed an offence, and 
not unfrequently seeks to conceal it. Some dogs acquire the 
habit of destroying sheep, in the manner of the wolf. Con- 
scious that they are committing an offence, they employ ex- 
treme precautions to prevent detection, using the dead of 
night to steal upon the flock, avoiding those in their imme- 
diate vicinity, and taking a wide circuit in returning home, 
so that the place where they live may not be discovered. 
They have been known to wash themselves in a pool or river, 
that the marks of the blood might be effaced ; and in all cases 
they clean themselves carefully of dust and blood before 
morning. Sir Thomas Wilde was cognizant of a case in 
which a dog addicted to this offence used to slip his head 
from his collar when he went away, and slip it back again 
when he returned.* 

The Dog, beyond any animal known to us, is grateful for 
benefits received. Should any one chance to save the life of 
a dog, or rescue him from some cruel persecution, the animal 
ever afterwards manifests gratitude. Rude and savage as 
are the unowned dogs of the Turkish towns, should the pass-. 
ing traveller bestow upon one of them, when in distress, a 
morsel of food, and speak kindly to him, the dog will wag 
his tail, and manifest, by the expression of his counte- 
nance, his gratitude to the stranger for the unwonted boon. — 
Should a dog be wounded, as by a thorn running into his 
foot, it is wonderful how perfectly he understands the pur- 
pose for which he is put to pain in the attempts to relieve 
him. A dog will submit to the surgeon’s knife, and lick the 


hand of the operator, and ever afterwards fawn upon his 
preserver when he meets him. Again and again have dogs 
been known to submit to the reduction of painful fractures, 
lying almost motionless for weeks until the cure was effected. 


* Quarterly Review, 1844. 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 691 © 


As the dog is grateful for benefits, so he sometimes shews 
that he can remember wrongs. Toa stranger who may have 
cruelly used a dog that may come into his power, the animal 
will frequently manifest, even to the close of life, an antipa- 
thy or indifference which subsequent favours cannot over- 
come. The devotedness of the dog to his immediate master 
is generally so great, that he will submit to much harsh and 
injurious treatment. He will seek to disarm resentment by 
increased obedience, and, at the first kind word or mark of 
confidence, seem to forget all that he has endured. Yet this: 
is not always the case, and often resentment lurks secretly 
in the feelings of the animal, to be revealed when least ex- 
pected. A fine Newfoundland dog, that had long been the 
favourite of his master, and accompanied him in his walks, 
was ordered by him to be tied by a collar and chain, in order 
that he might watch an outhouse. The master, after an in- 
terval, visited the captive, and was about to renew his ca- 
resses, when the dog fiercely repulsed him. It may be be- 
lieved that the animal knew or suspected the author of his 
captivity. A dog ordered by his master to be put to death 
for some trivial fault, looked upon him ever afterwards with - 
suspicion. Dogs, it is said, recognise habitual dog-stealers 
in towns; but however this be, it is certain that they know 
the persons appointed to kill dogs found wandering in the 
streets without masters, and manifest the kind of dislike to 


.them which a thrush or a jay exhibits towards a kite or a 


sparrow-hawk. Dogs have been sometimes observed to ex- 


tend their feelings of dislike of a dog that has injured them 


to the owner of the dog, thus associating the acts of the mas- 
ter with those of the servant. 

‘Dogs frequently manifest extreme jealousy of other ani- 
mals, even of a different kind, when they see them receiving 
the caresses to which they themselves have been used. This 
is especially observed in the case of the little pampered lap- 
dogs of ladies. If another lap-dog is brought amongst them, 


they will snarl at him, persecute him, and even refuse their 


692 THE DOG. 


own food for days together; and they will exhibit the same 
feelings towards a kitten, or even a child, that is fondled by 
their mistress. A beautiful little dog that had lost its mas- 
ter, and was wandering about perplexed and forlorn, made up 
to another dog, a pampered favourite, reposing at the por- 
ter’s gate of a mansion. The little dog used all his arts to 
win the favour of the happier stranger, laid himself down 
beside him, and gambolled about him. But the favourite 
was inexorable. He thought, perhaps, that the beauty and 
winning ways of the little wanderer might gain him favour 
within; and, on the latter attempting to follow him beyond 
the gate, shewed his teeth, raised his bristles, and threat- 
ened to oppose the entrance. The little dog flew at the churl, 
bit him severely, put him to flight, and then departed indig- 
nantly, like a hero of romance denied the rites of hospitality. 
As Dogs may be jealous of their fellows, so they may be - 
forgiving and generous.. Dogs, from their habits, and their 
intimate connexion with man, are naturally repulsive and 
suspicious towards strangers of their’ own species. But, 
should two dogs be brought up together, it is wonderful how 
attached they become, the one frequently pining, and re- 
fusing his food, when his companion is taken away. The 
powerful dog rarely attacks one much weaker than himself, 
and never a puppy, however he may growl at it and frighten 
it. When one dog, from any cause, attacks another, he 
rarely, unless urged on, carries his resentment beyond a 
moderate chastisement, and is almost always mollified by sub- 
mission. A dog, who has seen another in want of food, has 
been known to carry him daily a portion of his own allowance. 
A Barbet, or Newfoundland Dog, that will save the life of a 


man, will plunge into the water after a drowning fellow, and 


bring him on shore. A Newfoundland dog, once teased be- 
yond endurance by a cur, took the aggressor in his mouth, 
dropped him quietly over the bank of a neighbouring canal, 
and having suffered him to flounder about for a while, leaped 
into the water and brought him on shore. 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 693 


But of all the attributes of the Dog, those which seem the 
most to have claimed attention are his attachment to man in 
general, and. his fidelity to individuals in particular. The 
Dog very rarely, and never but under peculiar circumstances, 
seeks to gain his natural liberty. He prefers, to the state 
of freedom, the protection of man, and lingers near our 
dwellings, even when he is shunned and disowned by us. 
When he attaches himself to any one, all his actions indicate 
that the relation is one which has a foundation in the affec- 
tions of the animal, and does not vary with the degree of . 
benefits conferred. The dog that shares the lot of the miser- 
able and poor, is no less faithful than “another that enjoys 
all that can gratify the senses. The peasant boy, who rears 
up his little favourite in his cabin of mud, and shares with it 
his scanty crust, has a friend as true as he who has ease and 
abundance to bestow. Release, from the cord of the blind 
beggar, the dog that leads him from door to door, and will 
he follow you a step for all with which you can tempt his 
senses? Confine him in your mansion, and feed him with 
the waste of plenteous repasts, and let his forlorn companion — 
_ approach your door to crave a scrap of food, and the dog 
will fy to him with fidelity unshaken, and bound with joy to 
be allowed once more to share his miserable lot. Again 
and again has the dog of the humblest and poorest remained 
faithful to the last, and laid himself down to die on the 
grave of his earliest friend. Recently, a poor boy in a manu- 
facturing town had contrived, from his hard earnings, to 
rear up a little dog. The boy, as he was passing along to 
his daily work, was struck down, and dreadfully maimed, by 
the fall of some scaffolding. He was carried on a shutter, 
mangled and bleeding, to an hospital near, attended by the 
dog. When he was brought to the door, the dog endeavoured 
to enter along with him; but being shut out, he laid himself 
down. Being driven beyond the outer gate, he went round 
and round the walls, searching for any opening by which he 
could enter. He then lay down at the gate, watching every 


694 ; THE DOG. 


one who entered with wistful eyes, aS if imploring admit- 
tance. Though continually repulsed, he never left the pre- 
eincts night or day, and even before the wounded boy had 
breathed his last, the faithful dog, struck with total paraly- 
sis, had ceased to live. Itis well known that the soldiers of 
the French levies were often mere boys, brought from their 
country homes, to undergo at once all the rigours of the ser- 
vice. ‘They were often accompanied by their little dogs, who 
followed them as best they could. Often, after the carnage 
of a desperate field, these dogs have been found stretched on 
the mangled bodies of their youthful friends. A French officer 
mortally wounded in the field, was found with his dog by his 
side. An attempt having been made to seize a military decora- 
tion on the breast of the fallen officer, the dog, as if conscious 
how much his master had valued it, Sprung fiercely at the 
assailants. An unfortunate soldier, condemned for some of- 
fence to die, stood bandaged before his comrades appointed 
to give the fatal volley, when his dog, a beautiful spaniel, 
rushed wildly forward, flew into his arms to lick his face, 
and for a moment interrupted the sad solemnity. The 
comrades, with tears in their eyes, gave the volley, and the 
two friends fell together. A youthful conscript, severely 
wounded in the terrible field of Eylau, was carried to the 
hospital amongst hundreds of his fellows. Many days after- 
wards, a little dog had found its way, no one knew how, 
into the place, and amongst the wounded, the dying and 
the dead, had searched out his early friend. The faint- 
ing boy was found by the attendants with the dog beside 
him, licking his hands. The youth soon breathed his last, 
and a kind comrade took charge. of the dog: but the animal 
would take no food, pined away, and shortly died. Anda 
thousand other examples might be given of an affection in 
this creature unaltered by changes of fortune, and enduring 
to the last. 


The Dog, if we can judge by his motions in sleep, possesses 


the faculty of imagination. His eyelids move, his lips quiver, 


I 


eae 


SPECIHS AND VARIETIES. 695 


his limbs are alternately stretched out and contracted, as 
if he felt himself engaged in some contest with a fellow, 
or rushing upon his victim in the chase; and sometimes 
he utters cries, and starts from his sides bewildered and 
amazed. 


A Sa TTL INEM CaM |, 
a remgime prninetacngirr ci 


But far beyond a passing excitation of the nerves, is that 
terrible malady to which this faithful creature is subject, 
and which has excited in every age So painful an interest. 
The Rabies, or Madness of the Dog, is unlike anything else 
in the same class of diseases, inasmuch as it not only: affects 
the individual, but impels him, by an irresistible impulse, to 
communicate to other creatures the venom with which his 
own system is tainted. The miserable dog will not spare 
the friend for whom he would have laid down his life; but 
more frequently he communicates the poison when licking the 
hand that caresses him, for it is remarkable, that the affection 
of the animal for his master increases after the taint has 
been received, as if he knew that they must soon part for 
ever. But even when the disease has reached the crisis, the 
dog does not seek for human victims, but rather shuns the 
path of man. It is upon the lower animals, and, above all, — 
those of his own species, that he is urged as if by the in- 
fluence of some malignant power. Stealing upon his victim, 
he inflicts in an instant the fatal wound, and then pursues 
his haggard flight, snapping at any creature that crosses his 
path, or which his bewildered senses permit him to reach. 
He runs along with reeling gait, his eyes inflamed, his tongue 

hanging out, his lips tumid and black, until exhausted he 
falls down, biting the ground. Sometimes he sinks into a 
deep slumber, which lasts, for many hours, and then start- 
ing from his trance, pursues his way as before, until, faint 
and blind, he sinks down and dies. 

- When a dog has received the venom by the bite of another, 
the first symptoms observed are an agitated look, and rest- 
less change of place, an insatiable thirst, and a perverted 
appetite, which causes the animal to devour the most revolt- 


696 | THE DOG. 


ing substances. His eyes shine with an unusual brightness, 
and he seems to follow certain images in the air, at which he 
frequently darts as if to clutch them. Whenever this latter 
symptom appears, the animal must be chained or destroyed, 
for then no doubt remains regarding the nature of the malady. 
While the afflicted creature pursues with his eye the spec- 
tral visions around, it is marvellous, that should a familiar 
voice, as of his master or some remembered friend, fall upon 
his ear, he is suddenly recalled to sense: he crouches down, 
draws near to receive the wonted caresses, and looks implor- 
ingly around as if to inquire what it can be that thus afflicts 
him. But soon the countenance changes again, and the eyes 
as before follow the phantoms of the brain. The voice as- 
sumes a tone unlike to that of any known animal sound : it is 
a hoarse convulsive bark, terminating in a low shrill howl, 
which once heard can never be forgotten. Sometimes the 
animal is nearly mute, and the disease passes through its 
several stages without his exhibiting violence. At other 
times, and this much more commonly, his muscular power 
increases, and his agitation is beyond control. He gnaws 
his chain, tears the boards about him to pieces, and grinds 
them to powder, and from time to time darts at the imagi- 
nary beings which he fancies to float before him. The period 
of excessive fury, however, is generally brief, and death re- 
lieves him from his sufferings. 

Mr Youatt, who has well treated of this subject in his 
history of the Dog, thus describes the early stages of the 
malady in a Newfoundland dog put under his charge. “He 
was brought to me this evening, his eyes were wild, the con- 
junctiva considerably inflamed, and he panted quickly and vio- 
lently. The eyes were wandering, and evidently following 
some imaginary object, but he was quickly recalled from his 
delirium by my voice or that of his master. He had pre- 
viously been under my care, and immediately recognised me, 
and offered me his paw.’’* 

* “ The Dog,” by William Youatt, Esq. 


SS ae 


SPECIES AND VARIETIES. : 697 


When the disease is communicated to the human species, 
the symptoms may be described, but no description can paint 
the agonies' of the sufferer. The disease generally appears 
before the sixtieth day ; but often the virus remains dormant 
in the system for a longer period, sometimes for several 
months, and some say, but happily it is believed erroneously, 
for several years. The human sufferer has not, like the dog, 
an unnatural thirst, but, on the contrary, is terrified at the 
sight of liquids, so that it is in the human subject only that 
the disease can be called Hydrophobia. The human sufferer, 
like the dog, fancies himself surrounded by spectral images ; 
and, strange to say, may be recalled from the dreadful visions 
by the voice of a friend, and for a short interval be restored 
to all his faculties. Often he acquires an amazing strength, 
so that several men may be required to hold a stripling. The 
following is a case of a human patient, cited by Mr Youatt, 
from Dr Bardsley :—“ I observed that he frequently fixed his 
eyes with horror and affright on some ideal object, and then, 
with a sudden and violent exertion, buried his head beneath the 
bed-clothes. The next time I saw him repeat this action, I 
was induced to inquire into the cause of his terror. He asked 
whether I had not heard howlings and scratchings. On being 
answered in the negative, he suddenly threw himself on his 
knees, extending his arm in a defensive posture, and forcibly 
threw back his head and body. The muscles of the face 
were agitated by various spasmodic contractions ; his eye- 
balls glazed, and seemed ready to start from their sockets ; 
and, at that moment, when-crying out in an agonizing tone, 
‘Do you not see that black dog,’ his countenance and atti- 
tude exhibited the most dreadful picture of complicated hor- 
ror, distress, and rage, that words can describe or imagina- 
tion paint.” 

The same frightful malady may be conveyed to different 
animals,—the Ox, the Sheep, the Horse, the Cat,—affecting 
each in a different manner. It is not unfrequently commu- 
nicated to horses by the little dogs kept in stables. These. 


698 THE DOG. 


_ dogs, when in the streets, and following a carriage, are apt 
to be bitten unobserved by rabid dogs, and when they return 
to the stable, and fondle the horses by licking their lips, 
which they are apt to do, they communicate the poison. 

This terrible malady, it would appear, is found in one of 
the Canide in the state of nature. The Common Wolf has 
been repeatedly seen in the state of madness, not shunning, 
like the domestic dogs, the path of man, but rather seeking 
him out as a victim. It is not known whether it appears in 
any of the other wild canide, but it is certain that it prevails 
most in the countries where the dogs are allied to the wolf. 
Whether it may be excited in the System of the dog inde- 
pendently of communication of the poison from animal to 
animal, has not been determined ; but it is probable that it 
may be so engendered, and there is even reason to believe, 
that we owe much of the extension of this malady to those 
brutal fighting-matches of dogs which are still pursued to an 
incredible extent in our towns, and, above all, in those of our 
mining and manufacturing districts. 

_ Frightful as this malady is, its existence should not make 
us hate the Dog. There is doubtless an end or purpose, 
although we may not discover it, in this as in other bodily 
sufferings. It affords us at least a lesson of humility. It 
teaches us, that the same agent that destroys the faculties 
of the dog may take away the higher attributes of mind in 
Man, may place the same phantoms before the eyes of the 
human victim and the brute, and reduce both for the time to 
a common level of wretchednegs. 

Whether the distinctive characters of dogs are the result 
of pristine organization, or of changes produced in the natural 
state, or of forms and habitudes acquired by domestication, 
there is a remarkable distinction, we have Seen, between the 
different Races. From the intermixture of these races con- 


tinued from age to age, and from the endless varieties pro- 
duced in individuals by place, temperature, and the habitudes 
to which they are inured, it has become impossible to refer 


_ SPECIES AND VARIETIES. 699- 


the various groups to the types to which they may have be- 
longed in the state of nature. We find, indeed, in the natu- 
ral state, the Wolves, so called, the Hounds of Central Asia, 
the Dingo of the East, the Dholes of India, and others ; but 
the descendants of these having been mixed in every degree 


together, it is only in a few cases that we can trace the re- 


lation between the subjugated dogs and their prototypes. 
And further, there are dogs whose types, in the state of 
nature, we have not yet been able to discover, as the mas- 
tiff, the barbet, the spaniel. Any classification, therefore, 
that we can make of the races of dogs, founded on their 
assumed origin, must be imperfect; and all that can be done 
is to refer them, as far as the cases will allow, to certain 
types which may be held as the most characteristic of the 


different groups. Adopting this principle, we may arrange 


the principal European races in four general groups. 


I. The Lyciscan Group, comprehending dogs approach- 
ing more or less to the conformation of the Common 
Wolf. 


Il. The VERTRAGAL GROUP, comprehending the swift- — 
footed dogs, of which the Greyhound is typical. 


Ill. The Monosstan Group, of which the great Mastiff 
of Central Asia may be regarded as a type. 


IV. The INDAGATOR GRovP, comprising dogs which pur- 
sue their prey chiefly by the scent, and which, ‘i 
may be divided into five sections :— 

1. The True Hound, which hunts with his fellows, 
and employs the voice in concert. 
2. The Mute Hound, which hunts with others or 
singly, but without using the voice in concert. 
8. The Spaniel. 
4, The Barbet. 
5. The Terrier. 


THE DOG. 


I. THE LYCISCAN GROUP* 


Of the Lyciscan group of Dogs, those which inhabit the 
Northern Glacial Regions may be generally regarded as the 
least removed from the natural state. Within the limits of 
the vast countries where these dogs are found, extending many 
degrees on either side of the Arctic Circle, nearly all round the 
globe, from the shores of Greenland westward, by Behring’s 
Straits, to Nova Zembla, and the western extremity of Lap- 
land, are tribes of men having a wonderful similarity in ha- 
bitudes and aspect. Those of the Western Hemisphere are 
termed Esquimaux, though tribes of Copper-coloured In- 
dians inhabit the same region; those of the wilds of Siberia 
are Samoiedes, Kamtschatkans, and others ; those of the 
extreme north of Europe are Laplanders, who, living in a less 
rigorous climate, have made greater advances towards a set- 
tled state of life than the others. Within the limits of the 
gloomy region inhabited by these tribes, the sun for a pe- 
riod of the year never sets, and for another period is below 
the horizon. At about the noon, as it may be called, of their 
long day, and into the brief Space of eight weeks are crowd- 
ed spring, summer, and autumn, during which a Scorching 
sun melts the snow, and calls forth a rapid vegetation, while 
innumerable animals of the land and water rear their off- 
spring; and myriads of insects fill the air, tormenting to 
the inhabitants, but yet a bountiful provision to them, since 
the larve of the insects, hatched in their lakes and. rivers, 
furnish food to innumerable fishes. The winter begins with 
tempests and snow, and, for ten months of the year, the rigour 
of the cold is intense. In certain parts, the inhabitants con- 
struct their winter habitations of blocks of frozen snow, with 
windows of ice, which admit the light of their winter twi- 


* So named from Lycisca, a term applied by the ancients to dogs supposed 
to be derived from the union of the wolf and common dogs. The term Lycisca 
was likewise applied to Shepherd’s Dogs, 


oa 


THE LYCISCAN GROUP. . Tor 


light and their brilliant aurora; and, when the snow covers 
all the frozen huts to the top, the red glimmer of their light 
of whale-oil alone testifies to those above that human beings 
breathe below. Into these holes are crowded men, women, 
and children, like pigs beneath their straw, with all their 
store of blubber and flesh, producing an odour more fetid 
than the caves of wild beasts, and habits more disgusting 
than civilized men can imagine. But do the victims of so 
many horrors murmur at their lot? They would not ex- 
change it for all the pomp of cities; and Nature has been 
no more neglectful here of her living offspring than in her 
happiest climes. In these regions of winter, the human 
body becomes adapted to the conditions affecting it as per- 
fectly as in the intertropical plains. By a marvellous pro- 
vision, the people become fitted to breathe an atmosphere in 
which the vital air would seem to be almost exhausted, and 
enjoy cheerfulness of mind, and health of body, which those 
might envy who are doomed to suffer bodily afflictions worse 
thandeath on bedsof down. Theyissue forth from their steam- 
‘ing holes to an atmosphere without, where mercury freezes in 
a few minutes, and infants, at the breast endure a cold which 
would destroy a giant of the lower latitudes. The women, 
clad like‘the men in skins, pursue their daily toils without a 
murmur; and the men follow the chase, their darling pur- — 
suit, over wastes of frozen snow, and in pools, morasses, and 
seas filled with moving ice. Nor are the subjects of the 
chase wanting to them in their frozen deserts. The seas 


abound in seals, walruses, and whales; the reindeers, in 


herds, find food in plants elsewhere innutritious; bears are 
everywhere; the waters are alive with fishes; and innumer- 
able waterfowls cover the rocky shores and inland rivers. 
These men, savages as we deem them to be, have been able to 
form weapons for all their uses, canoes of skin, and garments 
of hide, nay, to subject the animals of their icy wilderness 
to their service. Some of them have subjected the Rein- 
deer to a domesticity as perfect as that of the Sheep in other 


702 - THE DOG. 


countries ; and all of them have subdued the Wolf, and pro- 
duced a race of Dogs, adapted to the chase, and to every 
service required, _ : 

The Dogs of these people have been often described by 
travellers, and by none so well as by our own daring naviga- 
tors in the Arctic Seas. They are muscular, and adapted to 
speed as well as the dragging of loads. They have the body 
covered with coarse shagey hair, underneath which grows a 
coat of delicate wool, which falls off in the season of heat, 
to be renewed when the sun, about to sink beneath the hori- 
zon, gives warning of the coming night of winter. The co- 
lour of the fur is usually a tawny gray, but sometimes it ig 
as white as that of the Greenland Wolves. The dogs are 
begun to be trained almost as soon ag they can walk, and 
when about two months old, are disciplined to the sledge. 
They are each attached by a single trace without reins ; and 
in the front, at a little distance from the others, is the leader, 
who is chosen for his superior docility and experience. The 
man sits on the fore part of the sledge, using his foot on 
either side to steady it amongst blocks of ice, and ready to 
spring off and vault again into his seat when any impediment 
occurs. He holds in his hand a whip, with a short handle a 
foot long, having a thong of hide from 18 to 24 feet. In 
Some cases he merely uses a crooked stick, which he throws 
at an offending dog, recovering it again from the surface 
with matchless dexterity. But, for the most part, the voice 
alone suffices to direct the wild but willing team. Each dog 
has his name, which, when uttered with a certain tone of 
voice, calls his attention to the orders given. The animals 
turn to one or other side, and hasten or slacken their pace, 
as directed. "When they meet a sledge coming in the oppo- 
site direction, they give it the right hand, as readily as the 


waggoners of England do in the case of carriages, under the 
penalties of Acts of Parliament. When the sledge is stop- 
ped, and the whip laid gently over the backs of the dogs, 
they lie down, and remain on the snow for hours, until the 


7 


4 4 [SE NRG RRR Ree 


» THE LYCISCAN GROUP. 703 


master returns to them. The leader, to whose guidance the 
general conduct of the team is trusted, manifests surprising 
docility, as if conscious of the trust reposed in him. He fol- 
lows the course indicated to him, avoiding the places of dan- 
ger, although every trace of the path is buried under fathoms 
of ice ; and although vapour and falling snow darken the air, 
so that he cannot see a foot before his eyes. When game 
is started, the whole team set off at speed, that they may 
bring the hunter within its reach, and themselves assist in 
destroying it. Jt is then that the man loses his command 
over his wild pack, so that the vehicle is dragged along with 
frightful violence. The game pursued is of every kind, from — 
the Elk, the Reindeer, the Fox, the Otter, to the Polar Bear, 
which last the dogs attack, or keep at bay, while the hunter 
uses his spear. . 

These dogs have an astonishing power of endurance. They 
will travel with a loaded sledge sixty or seventy miles with- 
out food. “<A walrus,” says Captain Lyon, “is frequently 
drawn by three or four of these dogs, and seals are some- 
times carried home in the same manner, though I have in 
Some instances seen a dog bring home the greater part of 
a seal in panniers placed across his back. The latter mode 
of conveyance is often used in summer, and the dogs also 
carry skins or furniture overland to the sledges, when their 
masters are going on any expedition.” . . . “Cold has very 
little effect on them, for, although the dogs at the huts. 
slept within the snow passages, mine at the huts had no 
shelter, but lay alongside with the thermometer at — 42° 
and —44°, and with as little concern as if the weather had 
been mild. I found, by several experiments, that three of 
my dogs could draw me on a sledge weighing 100 lb. at 
the rate of one mile in six minutes; and, as a proof of the 
strength of a well-grown dog, my leader drew 196 Ib. singly, 
and to the same distance, in eight minutes. At another time, 
Seven of my dogs ran a mile in four minutes, drawing a heavy 
sledge full of men. Afterwards, in carrying stores to the 


704 THE DOG. 6 


_ Fury, one mile distant, nine dogs drew 1611 1b., in the space 
of nine minutes.’ At another place, he observes of one of 
two sledges in which his party was conveyed, “the leader 
was instant in obeying the voice of thé driver, who never 
beat, but repeatedly called to him by name. When the dogs 
slackened their pace, the sight of a seal or bird was sufficient 
to put them instantly to their full speed; and even though | 
none of these might be seen on the ice, the ery of ‘a seal,’ 
‘a bear,’ ‘a bird,’ &c., was enough to give play to the legs 
and voices of the whole pack. It was a beautiful sight to 
observe the two sledges racing at full speed to the same 
object, the dogs and men at full cry, and the vehicles splash- 
ing through the holes of water with the velocity and Spirit 
of rival stage-coaches. There is something of the spirit of 
professed whips in these wild races ; for the young men de- 
light in passing each other's sledge, and jockeying the hinder 
one by crossing the path.” . . . “ The voice and long whip an- 
swer all the purposes of reins, and the dogs can be made to 
turn a corner as dexterously as horses, though not in such 
an orderly manner, since they are constantly fighting ; and 

I do not recollect to have seen one receive a flogging, with- 
out instantly wreaking his passion on the ears of his neigh- 
bours. The cries of the men are not more melodious than 
those of the animals, and their wild looks and gestures, 
when animated, gave them an appearance of devils driving 
wolves before them. Our dogs had eaten nothing for forty- 
eight hours, and could not have gone over less than seventy 
miles of ground, yet they returned, to all appearance, as 
fresh and active as when they first set out.’ 

These dogs, when the snow melts, and they are no longer 
needed for the sledges, are frequently turned adrift to find 
their own food as best they may, on the river-banks, the sea- 
_ shore, or wherever they choose to roam; and it is remark- 
able that, notwithstanding the rigorous treatment they have 
to endure, they faithfully return to their respective owners, 
or are easily collected by them, at the fitting season ; though 


3 


eaten 


ee eos 


- countries, the domesticated dogs exhibit. Yet generally, in 


» THE LYCISCAN GROUP. 705 


they must necessarily stray to great distances in pursuit of 
their game, and could easily make their escape from the 
bondage in which they have lived. 

Of the Northern Sledge-Dogs, those of Greenland are bet- 
ter known to us in England than any of the others, indi- 
viduals being sometimes brought by our whaling ships. They 
are generally of a white colour, like the wolves of the same 
country. The old dogs are sufficiently fierce and rude, but 
their progeny, reared in the domestic state, become as gentle, 
social, and attached, as any other dogs. They have been 
reared in different parts of Europe, and retain their likeness 
to the primitive stock, even to the colour of the fur. They 
are prized for their docility, fidelity, and social habits. They 
are favourite companions of the conducteurs of diligences in 
France. They lie at the feet of their masters, and are the 
trusty guardians of the property intrusted to them, and will 
hold the reins of the carriage in the absence of the coachman. 

On the Asiatic side of Behring’s Strait, the dogs employed 
for dragging sledges and bearing loads are more numerous 
than on the American. They are also taller and handsomer 
than the American race, but they have all the same essen- 
tial characters, and are manifestly no other than the Wolves 
of the country they inhabit. They are employed in Siberia 
by the Russian Government, and relays of them are kept for 
travelling, as horses are in other countries. Frightful ac- 
counts are given by travellers of the sufferings of these 
creatures in long journeys, from the failure of food. They 
will, in this case, tear their harness to pieces, and eat it, 
and, when one of their fellows falls down, set upon him and 
devour him, as in the case of wolves when any of their com- 
panions are maimed or killed. 

Southward of the Arctic Regions, the Dogs become of 
more varied kinds, so that we can then observe the effects 
of that mixture of races which, in all the more temperate 


the highest latitudes of the temperate zones, the prevailing 
as 


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706 THE DOG. 


form of the more common dogs is that of the Wolf. In the 
northern parts of Norway and Sweden, the dogs have so 
much of the external characters of wolves, that the portrait 
of a peasant’s dog might serve for that of a wolf of the 
neighbouring woods.. Dr Clark refers again and again to 
this resemblance; and every traveller who has visited the 
north of Europe must have been rendered sensible of the 
close affinity, or rather the absolute identity, of the wolves 


‘ and common dogs of the country. 


The kinds of dogs termed, in different parts of Europe, 
Wolf-Dogs, from their being especially employed in the chase 
of the wolf, are only in part to be referred to the present 
group. Some of those of Spain, indeed, have so close an ana- 
logy with the Pyrenean Wolf, that they must be regarded as 
the same; but for the most part, the dogs termed Wolf-Dogs 
are of mixed descent, and have a relation to the Vertragal 
and Molossian types rather than to the Lyciscan,—as the 
old Irish Wolf-Dog, the Spanish Mastin, the French Matin, 
and others. 

But more distinctly to be referred to the Lyciscan type, 
are the common dogs of shepherds, to which the term Shep- 
herd’s Dog is, with us, more especially applied. Various 
kinds of dogs, however, are employed in different countries 
for the tending of flocks and herds. In some they approach 
to the Mastiff type, as in the countries of the East, where 
they are employed to protect the flocks, not only from wolves, 
but from human enemies. In others they approach to the 
characters of the common wolf, and are of sufficient strength 
to encounter these enemies. Such are the Shepherd’s Dogs 
of the Pyrenees, which so much resemble the Black Wolves 
of the same country, that they may be mistaken for them. 
In Hungary, the common Shepherd’s Dogs so much resemble 
wolves, that a recent traveller tells us, that the owner of 
large estates in that country informed him, that he could not 
distinguish the dogs of his own shepherds from the wolves of 
the same locality ; and in other countries of the Danube the 


THE LYCISCAN GROUP. 707 


same resemblance is observed. In the Celtic parts of Seot- 
land, previous to the extensive introduction of sheep, the 
Shepherd’s Dogs were a kind of Terriers. For the most part, 


however, the common Shepherd’s Dog with which we are 
familiar in this part of Europe, has deviated in certain cha- 


racters, especially in size, from the pristine type of the wolf, 
though still the affinity may be sufficiently traced in indi- 
viduals to indicate their origin. Thus, if we shall place the 
older Shepherd’s Dog of the south of Scotland, termed a 
Colley, beside an Esquimaux Dog, we shall discover little 
difference between them in their essential characters, and 
still less between the Esquimaux Dog and the Shepherd’s | 
Dog of Iceland. The dogs of this class have a certain like- 
ness to one another, which may be ascribed, independently 
of a common origin, to their being employed in the same 
pursuits, and treated nearly in the same manner. They are 
of small or medium size, have the muzzle narrow, the ears 
sub-erect, the hair long and coarse, and the tail bushy. When 
these dogs are inured from generation to generation'to the 
tendence of flocks, they acquire the habitudes proper to this 
service: they become devoted, as it were, to the shepherd 
and his flock, and exhibit, in the discharge of their peculiar 
functions, a high degree of sagacity, patience, and fidelity. 
It is common for naturalists to exalt the Shepherd’s Dog, 
with respect to his natural endowments, beyond all the other 
races of dogs. But the Shepherd’s Dog, though wonderfully 
sagacious in every thing that relates to his peculiar services, 
does not appear to merit, with respect to intelligence, the 
highest place amongst dogs. He is inferior to the barbet 
and its varieties, in his aptitude to receive instruction; and — 
in particular qualities he falls short of others. Thus, in vigi- 
lance, he is not equal to the mastiff; in docility, he is inferior 
to the spaniel ; and in courage, he cannot be compared to the 
little terrier of the same countries. His habits vary with 
the education he receives. Where his province is to supply 
the absence of enclosures, and protect the vineyards and cul- 


708 THE DOG. 


tivated crops, he becomes vigilant, keeping his eye upon the 
flock, so that they may not Stray into the forbidden grounds, 
and gently turning them back when they pass beyond their 
allotted limits. This is the peculiar duty of the Shepherd’s 
Dog in most parts of France, which has given rise to those 
charming descriptions of the habits of this animal which the 
poets and naturalists of the country have given us. It is in- 
teresting to observe these docile creatures watching their 
little flock, obeying every sign of the shepherd, and slowly 
pacing round the little patches of pasture on which the animals 
are confined. In countries, again, where the flocks are large, 
and suffered to spread over great trécts of ground, as in the 
mountainous parts of England and Scotland, the same delicacy 
of management. is not necessary or practicable. The dogs in 
this case are taught to run swiftly to distant parts, to head the 
flock, to turn it to either hand, or bring it back to the shepherd. 
In the British Islands, the Shepherd’s Dogs present consider- 
able diversities of form and habits. Those of the southern 
counties of downs are mostly a peculiar breed, with shaggy 
furs, pricked ears, and generally with short or rudimental] 
tails. ‘They are rude, noisy, and generally less tender to- 
wards their charge than the dogs of the cultivated parts of 
France and Germany. In the countries of enclosures, the 
English Sheep-Dogs are of every sort, and have rarely the 
characters distinctive of a true breed. In the mountainous 
parts of the north of England and south of Scotland, the 
dogs of this class have acquired a more uniform set of cha- 
racters, and so have become a breed or race, the individuals 
resembling one another; and they excel all the others in the 
faculties and habits proper to their condition. They are 
termed Colleys, probably from the Celtic Coillean or Cuillean, 
signifying a little dog or whelp. This kind of dog is placed 
more in habitual communication with his master than most 
others. He inhabits the same cabin, and beeomes, as it 
were, a member of the household. He contracts much of 
the simplicity of habits and manners distinctive of those 


THE LYCISCAN GROUP. 709 


with whom he associates. He is homely in his demeanour, 
indifferent to the caresses of strangers, whom he rather re- 
| pulses than courts, and seemingly sedulous only in the dis- 
iz charge of his proper duties. He attaches himself to his im- 
mediate master ; and frequently, when transferred to a stran- 
ger, pines, and yields an unwilling service. The race is 
frequently crossed with other breeds ; but, for the most part, 
those are the most useful and trusty which retain the con- 
formation of the older colleys. They are faithful, and never 
. reluctant to exert their powers. When directed by the voice 
and gestures of the shepherd, they collect the straggling 
sheep, and bring them in a body to the places appointed. 
They run in silence; but, when driving the sheep into pens 
and houses, or forcing them to cross rivulets or narrow 
passes, they use the voice, barking with a sharp and peculiar 
tone. They have been known to follow a strayed sheep to a 
distant farm, separate it from the flock with which it had 
mixed, and bring it back again to its own pastures. Won- 
derful instances are on record of their sagacity and perse- 
verance, when left to their own resources. A curious case 
is mentioned by the Etterick Shepherd. A flock of newly 
weaned lambs under his charge, 700 in number, from some 
unknown cause, took sudden fright. In the endeavours of 
himself and an assistant to collect them, they separated, and 
fled in three divisions to the neighbouring hills, south, west, 
and east. Apostrophising his dog, the Shepherd exclaimed, 
“¢ Sirrah, my man, they’re a’ away!” Sirrah comprehended 
the import, and without a word,of direction, and although it 
was now midnight, set off alone in the pursuit. The night 
passed’on, while the anxious Shepherd and his fellow-labourer 
traversed separately every neighbouring hill for miles. Nei- 
ther the sheep nor the dog were to be anywhere seen; and the 
Shepherd and his friend, after the sun had been up, were 
returning to their master with the ungrateful intelligence 
that every one of his flock of lambs had been lost. On their 
way homeward, they discovered a number of sheep at the 


710 THE DOG. 


bottom of a ravine, the faithful Sirrah watching them, and 
looking round for relief. They thought at first that this 
was one of the three divisions, which the dog, in this parti- 
cular situation, had been able to master. « But what was 
our astonishment,” says the Shepherd, “ when we discovered 
by degrees that not one lamb of the whole flock was want- 
ing! How he had got all the divisions collected in the dark, 
is beyond my comprehension. The charge was left entirely 
to himself from midnight until the rising of the sun; and if all 
the shepherds in the Forest had been there to assist him, they 
could not have effected it with greater propriety. All that I 
can further say is, that I never felt go grateful to any crea- 
ture below the sun as I did to Sirrah that morning.” Anec- 
dotes of a like kind might be multiplied without number. 
The older shepherds of Tweeddale and the Cheviots delight 
to tell of the fidelity and services of these their humble compa- 
nions; and any one who would spend a day with a shepherd of 
Htterick, amongst his flocks on the hills, would receive more 
remarkable information regarding the habits of dogs than 
he could derive from all the cynegetica of Greece and Rome. 

Beside the true Shepherd’s Dog, there is a class employed 
in the duty of conducting those innumerable flocks and herds 
which are continually in the course of being conveyed along 
the highways to the towns and markets. The dogs em- 
ployed in this service are of a very mixed kind, and gene- 
rally more muscular than the true Sheep-dogs. They acquire 
a great aptitude for their peculiar service. When conduct- 
ing their charge, often through crowded highways and the 
streets of towns, they keep the animals together, head them 
or follow them as the case may require, and make circuits, 
that they may take their stations at the lanes and bye-ways 
into which the animals are likely to turn. They may be seen 
lying for hours together on our public roads, watching their 
charge, and preventing the animals from straying away, or 
being mixed with other passing herds, while all the time 
their careless masters may be indulging themselves in the 


THE LYCISCAN GROUP. “a 


neighbouring alehouse. Some of them have been known, 
by themselves, to conduct a flock of sheep, or herd of cattle, 
through a crowded city to the pen or yard to which they had 
been in use to go. But they are much more rude and harsh 
towards their charge than the genuine sheep-dogs. They 
do not hesitate to inflict wounds, when necessary to urge on- 
ward the terrified and exhausted flock. This difference be- 
tween their habits and those of the shepherd’s dog is the 
result of the peculiar employment of each. The shepherd’s 
dog is the guardian of the flocks, and fulfils the duties as- 
signed to him; the drover’s dog is a jailor, conducting an 
unwilling charge to the slaughter-house. 

_ Allied to the Lyciscan group, are likewise numerous other 
dogs, more or less mixed in blood. Such are the dogs termed 
Curs, which are frequently the offspring of the shepherd’s 
dog and terrier ; the Lurcher, which is the product of a shep- 
herd’s dog or barbet and the greyhound; the Ban-dog, in 
which the blood of the bull-dog is to be recognised ; and such 
are many more which do not admit of classification. 

But there is a race of dogs of mixed descent, yet so allied 
in blood to the Wolf, that he may be referred to the Lycis- 
ean type. This is the Great Dog of Newfoundland, whose 
parent stock appears to be the Wolf-dog of Labrador, a) 
which itself, there is reason to believe, has been formed by 
a mixture of this race, and some of the larger dogs of Europe./ 

The Island of Newfoundland stretches from the icy shores. 
of Labrador, from which it is separated by a narrow strait 
about twelve miles broad, across the Gulf of St Lawrence for 
nearly 400 miles, having to the south-east the vast submarine _ 
bed of rock and sand termed the Bank of Newfoundland. The 
Island towards the coast is rocky, and indented on every side 
by arms of the sea extending inland. In the interior it is 
wild and rugged, mostly covered with forests of dwarf pine 
and firs, and filled with innumerable marshes, pools, and 
lakes, whence streamlets and rivers, swarming with fishes, 
take their rise. It was discovered by John Cabot on the © 


SCOR te SER park A mare RMI eee ME se 


qi THE DOG. 


24th of June 1497, and, after several unsuccessful attempts 
at settlement, received a small English colony in 1623, and 
after fierce contentions, long carried on between the French 
and English for the possession, was finally ceded to the latter 
power by the Treaty of Utrecht. The settlements upon it are 
very numerous, but are all confined to the coasts and bays. 
They consist, exclusive of the capital St John’s, of little villages 
for the curing of the fish caught on the great Bank, and for 
carrying on a trade in the salt and other commodities which 
the fishery requires. The country, when discovered, was 
possessed by Esquimaux and a few tribes of Red Indians, 
long since almost exterminated by their mutual wars, and 
intercourse with lawless Europeans. It was probably from 
. the Esquimaux that the early settlers obtained their first dogs, 
and learned the uses to which they might be applied for 
draught ; but it is evident that European dogs, probably of 
the Mastiff breed, were early introduced. The dogs are em- 
ployed for dragging logs from the neighbouring woods for fuel 
and the uses of the fish-curers. They feed on the waste fish 
and garbage, which is’ everywhere found, and become go fond 
of this kind of food, that they will readily devour live fishes 
as they are brought out by the nets. They are made to un- 
dergo incredible labour, and great numbers of them perish 
every season from the cruel tasks imposed upon them. They 
have acquired the conformation and habits which suit them 
to the services to which they are inured, and transmit their 
acquired characters to their offspring. Their limbs are more 
muscular, and their bodies more bulky, than in the native 
sledge-dogs, while they want the power of speed which the lat- 
ter possess, and the faculty of following the deer and swifter 
animals in the chase. They are wonderfully patient, and 
never seek to escape from their taskmasters, whose com- 
mands they readily comprehend. Yoked to theiy trucks or 
sledges, they go, without a guide, to the woods where they 
are to be loaded, and bring back their burden, and, when 
unloaded, return again and again. Being continually on the 


THE LYCISCAN GROUP. 713 


_ sea-shore and the banks of rivers amongst the fishing-craft, 
they have become eminently aquatic in their habits, swim- 
ming and diving with ease, and picking up and bringing on 
shore any thing which may fall into the water. 

‘These dogs have been largely introduced into Europe, 
where they are admired for their massive forms, their docile 
habits, and the fidelity with which they attach themselves 
to our service. But it is to be observed that the dogs of the 
country itself, employed in the labours of draught, differ 
greatly from those which we bring up in a state of ease, 
and whose faculties we cultivate for our gratification. The 
dogs of the Island approach much more nearly to the sledge- 
dogs of Labrador than those which are reared up at our 
towns and country houses in Europe. They have the same 
wolf-like aspect as the dogs of Labrador, resembling them 
in the obliquity of the eye and red colour of the iris; and 
they have the odour of the wolf so strong as to be scarcely fit 
to enter a human dwelling. 

The Newfoundland Dog, as he is known to us in Europe, 
manifests a degree of sagacity rarely surpassed in any other 
race. He has not, indeed, the watchful habitudes, nor sur- 
passing instincts of the Mastiff, in guarding our persons and | 
property ; but when he is intrusted with any charge, he 
manifests no indifference towards the performance of it. He © 
will rarely attack human beings unless rendered vicious by 
confinement; but when a thief enters the guarded precincts, 
the dog will follow him from place to place until he has 
departed. He is fond of carrying any thing for the grati- 
fication of his master, and can be readily taught to go to 
markets and other places to bring the commodities with 
which he is intrusted. He delights to dash into the waves, 
and bring what is cast into them. But of all his endowments, 
that which has excited the greatest interest, is the instinctive 
desire which he manifests to save the lives of drowning per- 
sons. The efforts which he makes for this purpose, too, are 
combined with such adoption of the fitting means as are cal- 


714 THE DOG. 


culated to excite our admiration. When he seizes a drown- 
ing person, he endeavours to keep his head above the water, 
and makes use of his own body for the purpose of buoy- 
ing up the load. In the case of stranded vessels, he has 
been again and again employed to carry a rope from the 
Shore to the vessel, or, if himself on board the sinking 
ship, to convey a rope to the persons on the Shore, evincing 
by all his actions that he knows full well the service required 
of him. Many years ago, a vessel was wrecked on the coast 
of Norfolk, and all the crew perished. A Newfoundland dog 
had been on board belonging to the captain. He had made 
his way through the terrible breakers, and was observed to 
have something in his mouth. This was a pocket-book, con- 
taining the ship’s papers and other documents. It is sup- 
posed that the captain, faithful to his duty to the last, had 
intrusted these documents to the fidelity of his dog. When 
the dog reached the shore, he surrendered the pocket-book 
to one of the people on the beach. Mr Bewick, who re- 
lates the story, says that he afterwards assisted in bringing 
parts of the wreck on shore ; others say that, on deposit- 
ing his pocket-book, he fled, and was no more seen. Seve- 
ral years ago, a steam-ship, crowded with passengers, was 
run down in the Firth of Clyde by another vessel of the 
same class coming in the opposite direction. Many of the 
passengers were in the cabin, and were there drowned ; 
others were on deck, of whom the greater number perished. 
A Newfoundland dog, whose owner was never discovered, 
but who was one of the sufferers, was observed to bring a 
lady, who was struggling in the waves, to the shore. The 


lady was carried insensible to a neighbouring house, followed 
by the dog, and the usual means were resorted to for restor- 
ing her. The dog was observed earnestly to watch the pro- 


ceedings: the lady recovered, but some harsh words having 
been used by the people of the house to the noble dog, he 
fled, and was no more seen; and the lady endured the cruel 
mortification of never beholding her pregerver. A long time 


THE VERTRAGAL GROUP. 715 


ago, a gentleman in Virginia had occasion to cross a rapid 
river when in flood in a light boat rowed by a friend. He 
had with him a dog of this race. The party had left the 

shore but a little way when the boat was swamped. The 
friend of the gentleman perished, and he himself, deprived of 
consciousness, was hurried down the stream. More than a 
mile from the place of the accident, a person on the bank 
saw something dark in the flood, which an eddy brought suf- 
ficiently near to enable him to reach with a pole which he 
had in his hand. It was a man supported by a dog, the lat- 
ter nearly exhausted. The person laid the gentleman on the 
bank, and by rubbing him, endeavoured to restore heat to his 
body. The gentlemen awoke as from a fr ightful dream ; and 
became at once conscious of what had taken place, when he 
saw the red torrent sweeping past, the stranger endeavour- 
ing to restore him to animation, and his faithful dog licking 
his hands. 


Il.—THE VERTRAGAL GROUP.* 


The nearest allied, in conformation and habits, to the 
_Lycisean Group of Dogs, is the Vertragal, of which the com- 
mon Greyhound is typical. The Greyhound appears to have 
preserved his distinctive form, and to have been used for 
the services in which he is now employed, from early times. 
We can distinguish the characteristic form of the race in the 
representations of the Dog in Egyptian sculptures, where he 
is sometimes depicted as held in pairs by the leash, ready to 
be slipped at the game, as in modern times ; and on nume- 
rous medals which have been recovered from ancient ruins, 
and especially on those representing the Dea Venatrix, whose 
worship appears to have extended from the Indus to West- 
ern Europe, we find the Dog represented of a form which 


* So named from Vertraha (Grat. Cyneg.), » Dog used for the chase of the 


Deer and Hare. 


716 THE DOG. 


‘we cannot refer to any other type but this. In many coun- 
tries of the Hast, Greyhounds are very numerous. They 
abound, and have abounded, in every known age in Persia; 
and they extend into the countries beyond the Indus. They 
are in the possession of all the nomadic tribes of Western 

- Tartars, who use them largely in the chase ; and they extend 
northward into Siberia, westward into Asia Minor, Svria, 
Arabia, and Northern Africa, and all over the temperate 
countries of Europe. They were known to the Greeks, as 
their medals and Sculptures evince. But it is remarkable 
that Xenophon, in his enumeration of the dogs of chase of 
his country, does not enable us to recognise the Greyhound 
as a distinct breed, though he speaks of the breeds noted 
for their swiftness. This can only arise from imperfect 
description: yet Arrian, in a long subsequent age, drew, 
from the apparent silence of Xenophon, the conclusion, that 
the Greeks of that age were unacquainted with the true 
Greyhound, which, he asserts, the Romans only obtained a 
knowledge of from the Celtic Gauls, whence the Greyhound 
was termed Canis Gallicus or Celticus. But the Gauls and 
other Celtz derived the knowledge of their principal arts 
from the East, where the existence of the Greyhound is at- 
tested by monuments of an antiquity far beyond the age 
of Xenophon. Against the testimony of these ancient re- 
cords, the opinion of the noble Arrian avails nothing ; and ig 
contradicted, besides, by relics derived from Greece itself, 
which exhibit to us the figure of the Greyhound, that is, of 
an animal which we should now term a greyhound, though 
of ruder characters than by cultivation it can be made to 
acquire. 

Further, there is reason to believe that, from early 
times, the Teutonic as well] as the Celtic nations were in 
possession of this race of dogs. The Greyhound is the 
Windhund of the Germans, as he was the Gaothar, so 
named from Gaoth, the wind, of the Celtic Britons. He 

was the Grew-hunde, or Grig-hunde, of the Anglo-Saxons, 


OF 


THE VERTRAGAL GROUP 717 


whence the English term Grey. — the middle 
ages, we have innumerable notices of the Greyhound, and 
of the services in which he was employed. We find him 
depicted on heraldric escutcheons, and sculptured on the 
tombs of persons of illustrious rank. The Welsh Princes, 


by many curious laws on the subject of the chase, evinced 


the estimation in which the Greyhound was held beyond 
all other dogs. The Norman Princes of England carried 
their passion for this animal to that excess which they 
manifested in every matter in which the chase was con- 
cerned. They founded prodigal hunting establishments, 
in which the care of their troops of greyhounds occu- 


pied a primary place. They levied taxes of greyhounds, | 


and, in return for gifts of these animals, commuted heavy 
imposts, and granted tenures of land and posts of dignity. 
They even sought to restrain the use of this kind of dogs to 
the privileged classes, so that it became a saying, that a 
gentleman was to be known by his greyhound and his falcon. 
They enacted, in their forest-laws, that no greyhound, unless 
deprived of some of its claws, should come within a certain 
distance of the Royal Forests, shewing, by these and other 
barbarous enactments, that the Greyhound was then held to 
be the first in rank and importance of the Dogs of Chase. 
With respect to the origin of this swift and elegant class 
of dogs, the same obscurity exists as in the case of others 
whose prototypes we have been unable to discover in the 
State of nature. We might reasonably suppose that dogs of 
the Lyciscan group, habituated from generation to genera- 


tion to the chase of the swifter animals, assumed by degrees 


the conformation proper to this group. But it is more pro- 
bable, that it is not to the Common Wolf, but to some of the 
Swifter Canide of warmer countries, that we owe the true 
Greyhound. Some of the Dholes of India, it is known, are 
exceedingly fleet, and so much resemble, in their form and 
modes of chase, the Persian Greyhound, that travellers de- 
Scribe them by their resemblance to that animal. But the 


Se 


ee 


aA EA PES ACES See RN 


718 THE DOG. 


Persian Greyhound is of the same race with those of other 
countries of the East; and it is a reasonable supposition, 
that the Celt, as well as the Teutons of Europe, derived 
their greyhounds from this source, or, at least, that the 
greyhounds of the East were mixed in blood with the dogs 
of different countries, giving their distinctive characters to 
the breeds we term Greyhounds. But whatever be the pris- 
tine stock, one or more, of the Greyhound, the conformation 
of these animals, wherever they are found, shews us that 
they possess a certain common class of characters, and are 
fitted to pursue their prey by speed of foot rather than by 
the powers of scent. The form of the true Greyhound is 
peculiar, and distinguishable from that of any other class of 
dogs. His jaws are elongated, so that he may seize his prey 
when at speed; his neck is long, and his back extended and 
flexible ; and, the caudal vertebree corresponding with the ex- 
tension of the dorsal, his tail is long. His shoulder is oblique, 
So as to give freedom of motion to the fore-extremities. His 
limbs are long, tendinous and slender below the knee and 
hock, and bent and elastic from the fetlock-joint. His 
breast is deep, so as to give space for the lungs, but nar- 
rowed before, so that the limbs may not be thrown too far 
asunder in the stride. His abdomen is contracted, his loins 
are strong, and his posterior limbs are long and muscular to 
the hocks. His ears are delicate and slightly pendulous, 
and his sense of hearing is acute: his eyes are large and 
brilliant, and his integuments thin. But the external cha- 
racters of the Greyhound vary with the agencies affecting 
the animal. In the colder countries, his hair is long and 
wiry ; in the more temperate, it is short and smooth. When 
he is habituated from generation to generation to the chase 
of the larger animals, as the stag, he acquires a more mus- 
cular form than when he is employed in the chase of the roe, 


the fox, and the hare ; and when he is withdrawn altogether 
) from the pursuits natural to him, and reared up continually 
in an artificial state in our dwellings, he acquires the charac- 


600 ASERNNSR apoE a een 


THE VERTRAGAL GROUP. 719 


ters of a lap-dog. Further, by calling forth, by breeding and 
selection of parents, the conformation required for speed, 
we modify in a corresponding degree his faculties, as his 
strength, his courage, and his sense of animal odours. The 
greyhounds of different countries, therefore, though conform- 

_ Ing to the type of the group, vary, in their physical and 
psychical characters, with place, climate, the -habitudes to 
which they are inured, and the degree of culture bestowed 
upon them. 

In the British Islands, the Greyhounds were formerly of 

. greater size and muscular power than they have now be- 4 

come. Although employed in the pursuit of the hare, the J 

| fox, and the roe, their appropriate occupation was the chase |” 

of the stag, the fallow-deer, and even the boar and the wolf, | 

| until the latter were extirpated. They were employed along 

: with hounds, the proper function of the hounds being to find 

the game and pursue it by the track, while that of the grey- 
hounds was to run it down. The coursing of the larger deer 
by greyhounds continued to be a favourite pastime until the 
reigns of Elizabeth and James I., when the progress of popu- 
lation, the destruction of the forests, and, above all, the use 
of fire-arms, changed the current of this class of sports. The 
hounds were now employed alone and in large packs, and the 
greyhounds were used only in the chase of the hare and the 
fox; and ever since this period the coursing of the hare has- 

been eagerly followed as a popular sport, and a race of grey- 

hounds has been formed fitted beyond any other for this kind 

of chase. But in Scotland, the coursing of the stag and the 

employment of the larger greyhounds continued for a much 

longer time. These larger greyhounds were numerous in 

all the Highlands of Scotland until after the middle of last 

century, but rapidly diminished in numbers with the multi- 

plication of sheep, the use of fire-arms, and the change in the 

habits of the Celtic gentry. They are now to be found only 

in small numbers, sometimes crossed with other races, as the 

Pyrenean and German wolf-dogs, or, when pure, preserved 

1 


“Sete: 


720 "HE DOG. 


with difficulty, from the smallness of their numbers, and the 
consequent necessity of breeding from members of the same 
family. They are generally termed Deer-hounds, but do not 
differ, except in superior strength and stature, from the com- 
mon greyhounds of the country. They were a powerful and 
agile race of dogs, with stout loins, muscular limbs, and a 
rough wiry fur. They were of surpassing courage, could use 
the scent as well as the eye, and were capable of making 
amazing bounds amongst the rocky mountains where the 
stag pursued its flight. The same race of greyhounds ex- 
isted in Ireland before the ancient forests were destroyed. 
But their remains only are now to be recognised in the 
smaller race of shaggy greyhounds, which are yet preserved 
in some parts of the country. 

With the reigns of Elizabeth and James, it has been said, 
the ancient modes of employing the Greyhound began to be 
disused, and the coursing of the hare gained favour. In the 
time of Elizabeth coursing matches were established, which 
have exercised a great influence on the British Greyhound. 
For the regulation of these matches a set of rules, by com- 
mand of the Queen, was drawn up by the Duke of Norfolk ; 
and these rules were so perfect in themselves, that they have 
continued to be the model, in the case of this class of sports, 
up to our own times. The principle of them is, that the 
comparative merit of the dogs shall be tested solely by their 
power of speed; to which end every kind of artifice on the 
part of the dogs, as the lying in wait, or other unfair advan- 
tage over the game, is discouraged. ‘Two dogs only are per- 
mitted torun at a time. The finder of the game goes in 
front, and a person follows with the dogs in leash, who 
slips them when the game has reached a sufficient dis- 


tance, and on the word being given ; and it is remarkable 
that the same practice was followed by the Celtic Gauls, 
and afterwards adopted by the Roman sportsmen. The 
merits of the rival dogs are determined by an umpire, accord- 
ing to the rules, but always on the principle of giving the 


ee 


THE VERTRAGAL GROUP. ~ «tat 


award to the dog that manifests the power of speed in the 
highest degree. Hence, the heading of the hare, and turn- 
ing it, is reckoned so much in the game, a wrench or half- 
turn so much, and so on. These courses, since their institu- 
tion, have ever been in great favour, and numerous clubs are 


‘established in different parts of the country, which have their 


stated meetings, where the prizes are cups, collars, and the 
like, heavy betting, besides, taking place on the rival matches. 
It is to this system of matches in an especial degree, and to 


the general practice of coursing by the gentry of the country, — 


since the destruction of the larger game, that the English 
Greyhound has attained the high perfection at which it has 
arrived. The principles of breeding applied to its improve- 
ment are the same as in the case of the Race-Horse and 
other animals, and the pedigrees of greyhounds are recorded, 
and large sums given for those of superior blood. The names 
of Snowball, Major, and others, are as familiar to the fol- 
lowers of this class of sports, as those of Matchem, Herod, 


and Eclipse, are to the breeders of the horses of the Turf. 


By the system of breeding so assiduously pursued in the 


case of these animals, the British Greyhound has acquired, . 


in an eminent degree, the conformation which suits him for 
the kind of chase to which he is appropriated, and become 
the most beautiful and swift of all this class of dogs. But, 
exclusive attention having been devoted to the property of 
speed, other faculties have become impaired. He has lost 
the hardihood and boldness of the older greyhound ; his 


muzzle having been narrowed, the space for the extension of | | 
the nasal membrane has been lessened, and his sense of | 


smell impaired, and, with the diminution of the cranial 
cavity, his general intelligence and aptitude to receive in- 
struction. Yet the greyhound, even thus changed, is not the 
stupid and insensible creature which he is generally repre- 
sented to be. When bred up in the kennel, indeed, and used 
solely as an instrument of the chase, his finer faculties are 
not developed. But when reared up in companionship with 
3A 


Lente pe passe, 


* 
LOLA A TREE RINE TCR am RARE BF RE A 


= 


SSE EES SS A ARERR SE REET 


722 THE DOG. 


his master, the greyhound manifests neither indocility nor 
want of sagacity. He is affectionate, faithful, and delighted 
with the caresses and favour of his protector. With respect 
to the older greyhounds, they were remarkable, not only for 
their affection and fidelity, but for their Sagacity and courage. 
The fine euloguim of Arrian on the virtues of his greyhound 
is familiar to every classical scholar; and the minstrels of 
the middle ages have left us many charming descriptions of 
the fidelity, courage, and intelligence, of these animals. 

The blood of the older greyhound can be traced, in innu- 
merable varieties of dogs, found in all countries. It was a 
common practice of the ancients to unite different races of 
dogs together, so as to communicate to the one more or less 
of the properties of the other; and the same practice has 
been continued up to our own times. The union with the 
greyhound is calculated to give speed to the slower dogs. 
In this manner were produced the Larcher, and, apparently, 
the old Gaze-hound, which seems to have been the offspring 
of the talbot and deer-hound. This dog was employed in 
the pursuit of the stag or fallow-deer. When one of a herd 
was wounded, or otherwise pointed out to him, he selected it 
from the rest, and pursued it, using the scent and eye, with 
indomitable perseverance. In like manner, by uniting the 
greyhound with dogs of the Molossian Group, were produced 
many of those varieties which are termed Wolf-dogs and 
Boar-hounds, from their Special adaptation to the chase of 
the wolf and boar. The great Irish Wolf-Dog was a dog of 
this class. He was one of the tallest of the dogs of Europe, 
measuring from three to four feet high at the shoulder. He 
approached to the general conformation of the ancient deer- 
hound, but his muzzle was broader, his neck relatively thicker, 
his breast proportionally wider, and his limbs were more mus- 
cular. He followed the game chiefly by the eye, grasping 
it in the manner of the greyhound with his long and power- 
ful jaws. He was a dog of amazing courage, and could de- 
stroy unaided the fiercest wolf; and he communicated to his 


THE MOLOSSIAN GROUP. 723 


young his instinctive antipathy to that animal. This fine 
variety is now scarcely anywhere to be found. With the 
disuse of his appropriate services, he seems to have gra-_ 
dually diminished to the size of other dogs, so that the few 
that have been preserved pure cannot be compared in strength 
and stature to the ancient model. It has been usual for 
naturalists to class with the Irish Wolf-dog the great Dog 
of Denmark. But the Danish Dog is characterised by the 
clouded colour of his fur, which is probably the result of 
some intermixture with the races of warmer countries; for 
the peculiarity is not uncommon in the dogs of the South 
and East. It was known to the ancients, who absurdly 
ascribed it to an intermixture with the blood of the tiger. 
In England we are familiar with this peculiar colour in the 
case of a beautiful race of dogs which we call Dalmatian, 
from their being found in some numbers in the ancient pro- 
vince of that name lying on the shores of the Adriatic. They 
are common attendants on the carriages of the opulent in 
this country, and, being kept in stables, they manifest an ex- | 
traordinary love of horses, which, like other acquired pro- | 
pensities, they transmit to their offspring. | 


Iil.—THE MOLOSSIAN GROUP. 


The Molossian group of dogs comprehends the larger and 
fiercer kinds, which approach more or less to the type of the | 
Mastiff. The most typical of this extensive group is the 
noble Mastiff of Central Asia, which, from the high lands of 
Thibet, seems to have extended to the western limits of 
Europe. This is the most massive in his form of known 


dogs. His limbs are muscular, his breast is wide, his 


head large, and his muzzle broad. His upper lips hang 
over the lower jaw, giving him a sullen and austere aspect. 
The colour of his fur in his native region is a deep brown, | 
nearly black ; and over each eye is a light tawny mark, which 


724 THE DOG. 


generally remains even when the colour of the rest of the 
body has become changed. His voice is hoarse and deep, 
striking when heard in the silence of the night. His sense 
of smell is acute, but he is little fitted for the exercise 
of speed, and does not join other dogs to hunt in concert. 
The powers with which he has been endowed for his own 
defence are strength, vigilance, and courage. Were we to 
suppose such a dog to exist in the state of nature, his prey, 
we should infer, would be the larger animals, as the wild 
bull, the buffalo, and the boar. But we do not: know of any 
species of Canis yet existing in the natural state which may 
be regarded as the parent stock of the Mastiff, though that 
such may exist, or have existed, is rendered probable by the 
characters of the race, which have remained constant from 
age to age, and distinguish the true Mastiff from any other 
race of dogs. Neither do we know whether Africa, in which 
Some very large and fierce dogs are found, has not likewise 
produced its Mastiffs. 

The Asiatic Mastiff appears to have been known from the 
earliest periods in which we have any records of the Dog. He 
was familiar to the Greeks, who derived their finest breed from 
Molossis, a district of Epirus, opposite to the Island of Corfu ; 
and hence the Romans employed the term Molossus as a ge- 
neric term for this class of dogs. From the high lands of 
Middle Asia, where the typical form of the race seems to be 
the most developed, the Mastiff may be supposed to have 
been carried northward by the Seythi, and all westward to 
the extremities of Europe. It was particularly cherished by 
the Celt, to whom a dog so powerful and vigilant must have 
been of inestimable price, in countries of dense forest, pos- 
sessed by the larger wild animals, and by human enemies 
yet more dangerous. The Roman writers, accordingly, speak 
of the Molossi of the Barbarians, and especially of those of 
the Gauls, which they describe as being savage. and power- 
ful, and as being employed by the natives in war. They 
speak, likewise, of the Molossi of the Britons, which were so 


THE MOLOSSIAN GROUP. 725 


greatly valued, that functionaries were employed to collect 
them, that they might be transmitted to Rome, and employed 
in the cruel combats of the amphitheatre. 

The Mastiff, although he retains with considerable con- 
stancy the form and habitudes distinctive of his race, yet, 
like all the Canide, varies greatly under the influences te 


which he is exposed. Hence we find the mastiffs of different — 


countries diverging so much from the normal type, that their 
affinity with it can with difficulty be traced and further, 
the Mastiff has been, in a remarkable degree, subjected 
to mixture with other races, either that his properties of 
strength, daring, and vigilance, might be communicated to 
them, or else that the properties of these races, such as their 
powers of speed, might be communicated to the Mastiff. In 
England, where mastiffs were once very numerous, they are 
now scarcely to be found, the larger dogs, generally termed 
Watch-dogs, being almost in all cases of mixed blood. 

The true Mastiff is wonderfully fitted to be impressed with 
the temper and habitudes which we seek to communicate to 
him. Although a fierce dog, he possesses docility and saga- 
city in a high degree; and, although solitary in his habits 
with relation to his own species, he is fond of the companion- 
ship of man. When chained to a post as a sentinel to our 
dwellings, from day to day, and from night to night, he 
knows, indeed, and fulfils the duties imposed upon him. He 
maintains unwearied vigilance, giving warning of danger by 
his loud and threatening voice, and manifesting the fierceness 
of a tiger to the stranger who approaches the limits of his 
chain. But, under such circumstances, he has no scope af- 
forded him for the exercise of his faculties and powers, and 
becomes sullen, fretful, and savage, with the cruel captivity 
to which he is doomed. But let the same animal be brought 
up in the state of liberty, and treated with kindness by those 
to whom he owes obedience, and he will fulfil all his duties 
without sullenness or rage. When the shades of night be- 
gin to fall, he will walk around the premises he has to de- 


726 THE DOG. 


fend; and, on Seeing that all is secure, will either betake 
himself to the couch prepared for him, ready to awake on 
the slightest alarm, or, if danger be imminent, will move like 
a sentinel in his allotted bounds from midnight to dawn. He 
will not, unless trained to murder, take away human life. 
He is tender of those who may have come with no eyil 
intent within the guarded precincts; but his Sagacity enables 
him to detect the stealthy pace and suspicious demeanour of 
the midnight thief. He will rush upon the caitiff and hold 
him fast, or, if he offers to resist, throw him down, and stand 
over him, until assistance arrives. Ata mansion, surrounded 
with its park by a high wall, a gentleman, on a visit to the 
owner, strolled out after sunset amongst the shrubberies and 
pleasure grounds. A large mastiff employed to guard the pre- 
mises was in use to be turned loose at a certain hour. The 
gentleman, pursuing his solitary saunter, was alarmed by a 
rustling among the bushes behind him, and, suddenly turning 
round, beheld the dangerous mastiff close upon him. The 
gentleman offering no resistance, the mastiff quietly caught 
him by the skirt of his coat, and brought him a prisoner to 
his master. When the mastiff saw the recognition of the 
two friends, he seemed entirely satisfied, and used afterwards 
to follow the gentleman in his solitary walks like a Spaniel. 
_ There are too many cases, indeed, in which the fierce pas-. 
sions of the man may be made to react upon the instrument, 
and- adapt him to the most terrible deeds. Who has not 
heard of the frightful butchery perpetrated on the unoffend- 
ing inhabitants of the Antilles by sanguinary plunderers, who, 
not contented with common weapons, brought dogs from 
Kurope to run down their victims. These dogs were mastiffs 
of the race common in Spain termed Mastins. They were 
speedily trained to the dreadful chase; but the thirst of blood 
was not in the dog, but in the merciless men who abused 
their power over the instincts of the brute. In other cases 
in which the mastiff is trained to shed human blood, we may 
find a justification, perhaps, in the necessity of self-defence. 


oe 


TIE MOLOSSIAN GROUP. 72 


In those wild countries of Asia, where no law exists to pro- 
tect the weak, where robbery and murder are but common 
events, and where every stranger is presumed to be an enemy, 
the dogs manifest inexorable severity. Families, in order to 
protect themselves, rear numerous dogs of this race, which, 
when the men are absent, are the only guardians of the 
children and women. These dogs will not spare the stranger, 
who, however incautiously, enters the forbidden precincts. 
Even in Greece, and all over Turkey in Europe, the large 
dogs kept for protecting dwellings and herds, and which are 
a kind of mastiffs, are often very troublesome and dangerous. 
They will set upon the traveller and stranger the instant he 
appears; and who, if not well armed, will do well to sit 
down upon the ground, throwing away his stick, or whatever 
may appear to be a weapon. The dogs will place themselves 
around, keeping stern watch over the slightest motion of the 
captive, until the owners arrive. Such was the device which, 
we are informed, was practised by Ulysses, when, in the 
garb of a beggar, he was assailed by the dogs of his faithful 
Eumeeus. . 

_ Although the Mastiff may be trained to the destruction 
even of man, yet, in his natural temperament, he is nothing 
like the fierce and savage creature which he is supposed to 
be. He is more slowly moved to anger than other dogs far 
inferior to him in strength of body. No dog submits so 
patiently as he to the teasing petulance of curs, even when 
they purloin his food. Conscious of his strength, he seems 
to despise what would rouse other dogs to rage. He has 


~ been known to take a little dog which tormented him in his 


mouth, shake it roughly, and then drop it in any collection 
of mud or water within reach. He is remarkably docile 
towards children, who frequently pull him by the ears and 
tail, mount on his back, and perform other dangerous freaks. 
He has been known, when children have strayed from home, 
to take them gently by the clothes, and lead them to their 
nurse. No dog exhibits more steady attachment to any one 


ponerse 


LNT ETT 


RRsat: apa leita <omenes eit tt ee 


= 


aoe ete ia 


A 


728 THE DOG. 


with whom he is connected by special service. He will watch 
over the safety of his master, and brave death in defending 
him. In his proper province of watching, he often exhibits 
surprising instincts. At the seat of the Earl of Lichfield, 
three miles from Blenheim, is a portrait in the dining-hall of 
a former owner of the manor, Sir Henry Lee, with the figure 
of a noble mastiff, who had Saved the owner’s life, executed 
by Johnston, a painter of the time. A Servant, it appears, 
had formed the design of assassinating his master and rob- 
bing the house. On the night of the intended murder, the 
dog, who had never before been much noticed by his master, 
followed him for the first time up Stairs, and resisted every 
effort to drive him away. In the dead of night, the servant 
entered the apartment to execute his bloody design, when he 
was in an instant seized by the dog, and, being secured, con- 
fessed his purpose. The dog, it may be supposed, had gur- 
mised the design of the villain from the preparations he had 
made, either by himself, or in conjunction with others. A 
Somewhat similar incident occurred about the middle of last 
century, in the case of a nobleman of the Scottish Border, 
who, when travelling in Italy, was compelled to lodge at an 
obscure inn, where, it was afterwards discovered, many mur- 
ders had been committed. The dog, obstinately resisted his 
master’s intention to go to the bed prepared for him, and the 
nobleman happily confided in the Sagacity of the animal. 
The bed set apart for the travellers to be Sacrificed was, it 
Seems, So contrived, that it could be lowered into a cellar un- 
derneath. At midnight, the nobleman, from the chair on 
which he had placed himself, witnessed the silent descent of 
the empty bed, and, keeping to his arms, and guarded by his 
noble dog, escaped destruction, 

Conforming to the Molossian type, but yet differing greatly 
in temperament from the Asiatic Mastiff, is a race of dogs 
which has existed in the British Islands beyond any record. 
This is the Bull-dog, which, though it must be referred to 
the present type, yet presents a set of characters which dis- 


Pe IP PR ER RMI, AMEN OT EERIE in, isi: EO Si TI ci OMS CRIS ote, 


THE MOLOSSIAN GROUP. , 129 


tinguish him from the true Mastiff. His muzzle is very 
short and truncated, the jaws are large and powerful, the 
lower projecting beyond the upper ; and, corresponding with 
the strength of these organs, is the expansion of the tempo- 
ral and other muscles employed in moving them. The fore- 
head is short, and the cranium is extended in breadth pos- 
teriorly, producing an excessive expansion behind the ears, 
shall we say, of the region of the brain, indicative of the in- 
a stinct to destroy, which many believe the same conformation | 
| to indicate, even in the human species? His loins and pos- 
terior extremities are relatively small, but his neck is very 
thick, and the muscles of the breast and shoulder are largely 
developed. His fore-limbs are bent outwards above, so as - _ 
to afford a sufficient basis of support to his broad and mas- 
Sive chest. | 

All the habits of this fierce and dangerous dog indicate the 
predominance of the purely animal propensities over those 
faculties which, in the lower animals ay well as in man, we 
| may term intellectual. He is less apt to receive the impres- = 


Hast sa _ a — ee — —— 
Op ARID AO COCOA ~ 


Nr mermeneem aera. 


Sions we seek to convey to him than any of the larger dogs. 
He defends, indeed, our persons and property with deter- 
mined resolution, but this is rather by the exercise of brute 
force than by the manifestation of those powers which cha- 
. racterise the services of our superior dogs. He follows si- 
lently at the heels of his master, runs fiercely at other ani- 
mals, and bites without giving that warning by the voice 
| = which other dogs are in use to give. He sullenly repulses 
| the advances of strangers, and shews none of that forbear- 
ance towards the weak of his own kind which the nobler 
mastiff displays; and he is almost the only dog that does 
not seem to respect the weakness of the child. He feels hig 
own strength, but seems to be incapable of measuring that 
which is opposed to him. Thus, he will fly at the throat of 
the lion or the tiger as freely as at a calf, when a single 
Stroke of the paw of one of these terrible creatures would 
lay him dead in an instant. When he seizes an animal he 


730 THE DOG. 


holds fast, and will endure mutilation rather than quit his 
hold. He has little power of speed, and does not join other 
dogs, in the manner of the hound, in pursuit of game. 


From the singular temperament of this dog, some natu- 
ralists have conceived it probable that he has been produced 
by a mixture of the blood of the Hyxna with that of the 
common dogs. This may have been, although the hypothesis 
appears to be a violent one; and we may more naturally 
seek for the origin of the Bull-dog in the adaptation of his 
form and habits to the services required of him. Dogs of 
the Mastiff kind, we know from our early writers, were em- 


ployed in these Islands, in remote times, for the destruction 
of the Boars, which were then numerous, and of the Wild 
Oxen, which abounded in the woods of the country until the 
fourteenth century. If any kind of dogs were devoted espe- 
cially to the destruction of the Wild Cattle, it would be 
| merely in accordance with what we know to take place in 


analogous cases, that the animal would become suited to the 
\.employment, in habits, temperament, and form. Now the 
Bull-dog is fittéd, beyond any other dog, for the attack of 
the Bull. While all the dogs of the Lyciscan group imitate 
the wolf in attacking this animal behind, the Bull-dog at 
once assaults him in front, and endeavours to seize him by 
the muzzle, which is the most tender part, and, held by 
which, the bull becomes almost helpless. So perfectly is 
this method of attack the habit of this race of dogs, that even 
a whelp of a few months old adopts it, and manifests the ut- 
most antipathy to a bull, though he may never before have 
seen one. further, the bull himself, when he attacks an 

j; animal, lowers his head that he may use his horns with 
effect. The Bull-dog, that he may meet this method of at- 
tack, runs close to the ground, and his fore-limbs are bent 
outwards, which brings his body nearer to the earth than in 
the case of any other of the larger dogs. Were a tall dog to 
attack a bull in front, he could scarcely escape being gored, 
Further, the lower jaw of the Bull-dog projects beyond the 


Ses 
tata tcnnastee 


er eee 


EE SEC oI SR CT ee ge 


—————— 


pe PR SE EL ae Mg ae 


THE MOLOSSIAN GROUP. 731 


upper, which gives him the very advantage which he requires, 
in running directly from the front to grasp the muzzle of his 
antagonist. T'hus the Bull-dog exhibits that adaptation to 
the uses to which he is rendered subservient which we see 


in every race of dogs; and we have only to suppose the pe- | 


pe De eee ae SOUS CLI it on 


culiar characters of the animal called forth from generation | 
to generation by selection and breeding, to be assured that | 


a true breed would be formed. This hag been so in a re- 
markable degree in the case of the Bull-dog. After the Wild 


Oxen of the woods were destroyed, the practice was intro- | 


duced, so early, we learn, as the reign of King John, of bait- 
ing the domesticated bull and other animals; and thus the 
breed of dogs suited to this end was preserved, nay, culti- 
vated with increased care up to our own times. The extent 
can scarcely be imagined to which this savage practice was 
carried in England, even till late in the last century. On 
the accession of George III., there was scarcely a consider- 
able town in England in which there was not a bear-garden, 
or some place set apart for these frightful exhibitions ; and 
even after they had ceased to be common, great numbers of 
bull-dogs were kept for fighting with one another, and for 
exportation to Germany and other countries. 

But the Bull-dog, as he has received a peculiar class of 
characters, so he may lose them under new conditions of life. 
The jaws may diminishin size, and, with this change, the short- 
ness of the frontal bones, and lateral expansion of the pos- 
terior part of the skull, to which we may reasonably ascribe 
that conformation of the cranial cavity to which the peculiar 
propensities of the animal are due. The number of these dogs 
has been greatly diminished, and of those -that remain, few 
retain the strength and-ferocious temper of the older race ; 
and we may hope to see this variety of dog disappear with 
the disuse of the cruel occupations to which it has been ren- 
dered subservient. Fierce and indomitable as this kind of 
dog seems to be, it is certain that there are cases in which 
he has manifested affection and fidelity. More than one in- 


sroebamone: 


tee Lg NIH oy oye 
; sta ‘ Bursa a = 


ee 
aie 


eee 


782 THE DOG. 


stance, it is believed, is on record, in which a Bull-dog has 
leaped into water to save a drowning person. 

The Asiatic Mastiff seems to have been widely spread over 
the temperate countries of Western Asia and Europe, and 
his characteristic form and habit may be traced in numerous 
dogs in all these countries, as in most of those employed in 
the chase of wolves and boars, such as the great Irish Wolf- 
dog, and most of the German Boar-hounds, but still more in 
the larger dogs used for protecting our persons and property, 
as the Albanian Sheep-dog, the English Ban-dog, the Spanish 
Mastin, the French Matin. Of these mixed races it is un- 
necessary to treat in this place ; but there are two races con- 
forming to the Molossian type, which merit a passing notice, 
—the Great Dog of St Bernard, and the Old British Blood- 
hound. 

The Great Dog of St Basin is found in the mountains 
of Switzerland ; but is better known as the breed reared at 
the Hospice, as it is called, situated at the pass of the Great 
St Bernard, one of the defiles connecting the high lands of 
Switzerland with Italy. This Hospice is an ancient Monas- 
tery, placed amidst a wilderness of rocks at the summit of the 
pass, more than 8000 feet above-the level of the sea. It ig 
inhabited by a small number of monks of the order of St 
Augustin, who, at the early age of eighteen, devote themselves 
to the purpose of affording succour to persons in distress, 
and way-worn travellers, of whom great numbers traverse 
the dreadful pass even in winter. The period of the vow of 
the brethren is fifteen years, the term of which few of them 
reach, on account of the maladies to which they become sub- 


ject, from the rarity of the air, and the rigour of the cold, ina 
region of clouds and storms. Scarcely four months in the 
year include spring, summer, and autumn, during which the 
water in the pools and tanks freezes every night, and clouds 


of snow frequently cover the mountains. . The remaining 
eight months of the year are the proper winter, during which 
snow falls almost daily, covering all the rocky mountains to 


THE MOLOSSIAN GROUP. 733 


their summit, and accumulating in vast heaps, which fill up 
the hollows and ravines. The snow, as it fally in this high — 
region, does not descend in the form of flakes as in the lower 
country ; but, as it passes through the rarefied air, it freezes, 
and comes down in the form of a fine powder, which, when 
the wind blows strong, is raised again from the surface 
in clouds. When a sudden tempest arises, the whole air 
is filled in an instant with this powder, through which the 
light of the sun can hardly penetrate. When the lonely 
traveller is overtaken by one of these Tourmentes, as they 
are called, his life is in the utmost peril. Every moun- 
_ tain top, or object that can guide him, is hidden. Bewil- 
dered, he loses all knowledge of place, and strays from the 
course he should pursue, until, lost in the darkness, and 
struggling vainly amidst the soft snow under foot, he perishes 
miserably. The kind monks and their assistants are con- 
tinually on the watch, aided by their matchless dogs, which 
have acquired, in a surprising degree, the faculty of discover- 
ing the path of the traveller, or indicating the place where 
he lies buried, perhaps under fathoms of snow. The dogs . 
are sent out alone by day or by night. They have frequently 
attached to their neck a light hamper, in which is contained 
a little food and cordial. When they reach the wanderer, 
they conduct him to the Hospice, or if they find him, as too 
often happens, stretched on the snow, and unable to move, 
they bay aloud to give notice that some one has been found, 
and often stretch themselves over him, that they may defend 
him from the drifting snow, or warm him with the heat of 
their own bodies, or, hurrying back to the monastery, bring 
the assistance required. In this manner, great numbers of 
human beings have been saved. Often, however, the dogs 
find but the grave of the hapless traveller, already buried 
underneath the drifting snow. In this case they utter a loud 
and mournful howling, which, heard amid the darkness and 
roaring of the storm, announces to the anxious fathers, that 
they can now but render the last rites due to the dead. The- 


734 THE DOG. | 


body is dug up, and preserved for the recognition of friends ; 
and such is the effect of the sudden congelation, that the 
frozen corpses will often remain for years unaltered. The 
dogs endowed with these amazing faculties, transmit them 
to their offspring, so that a breed is formed scarcely requir- 
ing human instruction to fit the young for their duties. The 
number kept at, the Hospice itself is very small, but the race 
extends to the neighbouring country, and individuals can be 
easily obtained. . 

The Old British Blood-hound was a powerful dog, memor- 
able for the cruel uses to which his faculties were applied. 
He had the form, and the colour of the fur, even to the tan- 
coloured mark above the eyes, distinctive of the Asiatic Mas- 
tiff. But he had the ears longer and more pendulous, resem- 
bling in this respect the older hounds of Englamd, so that 
we may believe him to have been intermediate in blood be- 
tween the Mastiff and the Hound. In early times, he seems 
to have been employed for the rousing of the fiercer game, 
coming under the class of hounds termed Lyme-hounds. His 
especial employment afterwards became the following of 
the track of wounded deer. He was termed Blood-hound, 
from the erroneous opinion that he followed the wounded 
prey by the scent of blood. In Scotland he received the 
name of Sleuth-hound, which, however, was an appellation 
common to dogs that followed game by the sleuth or track. 
We are ignorant of the time when he began to be em- 
ployed in the pursuit of human beings, though it was pro- 
bably very early, and a relic, perhaps, of the ancient use of 
the Canes bellicosit. However this be, it is certain that the 
Blood-hound was for many ages, and especially in the border 
districts of England and Scotland, extensively used for this 
cruel purpose. He was made to hunt felons, nay, persons of 
distinction who might have escaped from the field of battle. 
His last illustrious victim in the British Islands was the un- 
fortunate Duke of Monmouth, who was found concealed in a 


ditch. When put upon the track of his human prey, he fol- 
3 


THE MOLOSSIAN GROUP. | 735 


lowed it with indomitable perseverance, hour after hour, nay, 
itis said, day after day. When once upon the scent, nothing 
could divert him from his purpose. Unravelling every maze 
of the hunted wretch, he uttered, from time to time, the deep 
and solemn bay which announced to those who followed that 
he was upon the fatal scent. It is said, that when he came 
up to his victim he did not seek to shed his blood, but held 
him fast until the pursuers arrived. It is amazing to what 
extent the use of this dangerous instrument was carried in a 
former age in these Islands. By a law of the Scottish Par- 
liament, it was declared that no one should “ perturbe or 
slay’ the Sleuth-hound, or those who were with him, when 


in pursuit.of malefactors; and by the Border laws, an impost 


was levied for the keeping of blood-hounds, of which any one 

was entitled to claim the use for the discovery of stolen goods. 

With the employment of fire-arms, and the establishment 

of settled government, the use of the Blood-hound passed 

away, and the race almost ceased to be anywhere reared. A 

few of them are still kept, for the discovery, it is said, of 
deer-stealers, but they are rarely so pure as to present the 

uniform characters distinctive of a true breed. But what is 

worthy of note, they still retain the acquired instincts of their 

race, and can be taught, with the utmost facility, to follow 
the footsteps of human beings. , 

Tt can scarcely be desired that a race of dogs that may be 
applied to purposes so dangerous should be preserved ; and 
yet the faculties of which it is possessed are worthy of our 
admiration. The Blood-hound that has been instructed to 
make prey of man follows, we may be assured, no instinct of 
nature, but merely yields to the power which is exercised 
over him. The same faculties which enable him to pursue 
the footsteps of the midnight felon, could be employed, as in 

the case of the noble dogs of St Bernard, to trace the path 
of the lonely traveller, and rescue him from destruction. 


THE DOG. 


IV._THE INDAGATOR GROUP.* 


I. Tur True Hounp.—There are Canide, it has been 
seen, in the state of nature, which pursue their prey in packs, 
and use the voice in concert, as the Wild Hound of Nepaul, 
. the Dog of Beloochistan, the Jackal, and the Hunting Canide 
| proper to Africa. It is from this class that we must sup- 
pose the various races possessing the same faculty in the 
domesticated state to have been directly or indirectly de- 
rived. But the hunting dogs of different countries have been 
so mixed in blood with one another and with other races, 
that it is now impossible to refer any given race to its source ; 
and all that we can safely infer, in the state of our know- 
ledge, is, that the domesticated dogs, having the property of 
hunting their prey by the scent and in concert, must have 
derived this property from canidze endowed with the same 
faculty in the natural state. Of the wild of the species, the 
Dogs of Nepaul and Beloochistaén the nearest resemble the 
Hounds, so called. But we cannot with any assurance 
assert that they are the sole progenitors of all hunting dogs, 
any more than we can maintain that all dogs are derived 
from the common wolf. 

The ancients, in their different Cynegetica, give us an 
ample enumeration of the various kinds of hounds employed 
by them in the chase, sometimes distinguishing them by 
their qualities, and sometimes by the places or countries 
in which the most eminent breeds were produced. Thus, 
they speak of the Spartan, the Cretan, the Locrian, and many 
more, which probably resembled the Stag-hounds of another 
age,—the Metagon, or Mute-hound,—the Petronius, which 


* So named from indagare, to search in the manner of a hound. It cor- 
responds with the Canes nare sagaces of the Roman writers, according to their 
threefold division ; 

s ille gravioribus apte 
Morsibus ; he pedibus celeres; he nare sagaces.” 


2 


THE INDAGATOR GROUP. ee 


appears to have resembled the modern harriers and fox- 
- hounds,—the Agasseus or Beagle, and so on. 

During the middle ages, all the nations of Europe were in 
possession of Hounds ; but it was only by degrees, and in 
certain countries, that they were employed in the manner 
distinctive of the modern chase. They were used to find 
and start the game, and drive it into nets or palisades, or 
to bring it within reach of the swifter dogs, or of the wea- 
pons of the hunters, rather than to follow the track of a 
single victim, and pursue it, unaided, till the end of the chase. 
Up to the close of the Anglo-Saxon dominion in England, 
and amongst the Celtic Britons of Wales and North Britain 
till a late period, this mixed method of chase, in which the 
only end was the destruction of the game, appears to have 
been the prevailing one, just as it was amongst the Greeks 
of the age of Xenophon. When the fiercer game was de- 
stroyed, and the deer only remained of the larger beasts 
of chase, and when the deer themselves became scarce, then 
a more refined method of chase was by degrees introduced. 
Single victims were selected, and pursued by packs of 


hounds; but still. the mixed method of hunting was the | 


more common. In England, until the reign of Elizabeth, 
we can scarcely recognise any other in the accounts we 
possess of the hunting-matches of the times. Greyhdunds 
were almost always taken out along with the hunting-dogs, 
and either mixed with them in running, or kept in relays 
to be slipped when the game came in sight; and every ad- 
vantage was held to be allowable for the destruction of the 
quarry. 

The animals chiefly hunted were the native deer, of which 
the swiftest, boldest, and most powerful, was the Stag or 
Red Deer, Cervus Elephas, of which the male of a certain age 


is termed Hart, and the female Hind. "When this creature 


is pursued, he stretches’ boldly across the neighbouring 
country, stops from time to time to listen to the baying of 


the pack, and then pursues his flight. But the hounds, 
3B 


sis k 


a aa 


ee 


me - ol 


Saeed 


a 


Ne 8 


738 THE DOG. 


threading every maze of his track, continually gain upon 
him, while he vainly calls forth all his remaining powers to 
escape ; and when at length the dogs reach him, he makes 
a last sad effort for the preservation of his life. He turns 
round, striking on every side with his formidable antlers, 
and betakes himself, when the case allows, to a pool or river, 
where the dogs are at a disadvantage. But in the end, sur- 
rounded on every side, he is torn down, or pierced by the knife 
of the hunter, if he be not, as is now practised, saved, in order 
that he may undergo another day of agony and terror. This 
fine species scarcely now exists in the wild state in England 
and Ireland, a few scattered pairs only being found in the high 
lands of Devonshire, and in the West of Ireland ; and it only 
exists in considerable herds in the most mountainous parts of 
Scotland, where the nature of the country does not admit 
of its being pursued by hounds.—The Fallow-deer, Cervus 
Dama, of which the male is termed Buck, and the female 
Doe, is now very rare in the state of liberty, being almost 
exclusively confined to parks and preserves. The fallow- 
deer is greatly smaller, and less wild and powerful, than 
the stag. But when chased by hounds, he runs with amaz- 
ing swiftness, stopping, in the manner of the stag, to listen, 
from time to time, to the baying of the hounds in the dis- 
tance. Like the stag, he stands at bay as a last resource, 
while tears seem to stream from his eyes, and avails himself 
of neighbouring water, that he may the better defend him- 
self—The Roe, Cervus capreolus, is the smallest, most gentle, 
and elegant, of the native deer. But the roe is now exceed- 
ingly rare in the wild state, being confined to a few woods 
and mountain copses in the ruder parts of Scotland. It has 
surpassing fleetness, but has nothing like the strength and 
boldness of the stag and fallow-deer, and used to be run 
down by greyhounds in the manner of the hare. When 
chased by hounds, the gentle creature employs innumerable 
wiles to save itself, seeking to baffle the dogs by doubling 
and crossing its own path, and by leaping to a side, and 


li iain = Sa 


THE INDAGATOR GROUP. 739 


couching down until the hounds have passed ; and when over- 
taken, conscious of its want of power, it offers no resistance. 

It was chiefly for the preservation of these deer, but, above 
all, of the stag, that the spirit of the ancient forest-laws of 
England was maintained, while almost a herd of deer was 
to be found in the woods. But, with the interrupted reign 
of the Stuart family, the civil wars, and the freer use of fire- 
arms by the people, the numbers of the native decr con- 
tinually diminished, until, with the exception of those found 
in the wilds of Scotland, they were almost confined to the 
parks and preserves of the opulent. 

The hounds employed in England for the chase of the wild 
deer were generally termed Raches. They likewise received 
the name of Talbots, a word of uncertain origin, perhaps 
merely the proper name of some person, or of some place 
where a good breed was reared. They were a race of large 
dogs, nearly of the size of mastiffs, and with something of the 
same aspect. They had the muzzle broad, the upper lip hang- 
ing over the lower, the ears long and pendulous, the chest wide, 
with a kind of dewlap, and the limbs muscular and crooked. 
Their voice was deep and sonorous, and they were endowed 
with an exquisite sense of smell. They were far inferior in 
speed to the modern hunting dogs, but excelled them in their 
adherence to the track of the game, and their pertinacity in 
pursuing it. At first a few only of the more experienced 
hounds were let into the'covert, in order to find the game, 
when they manifested unrivalled sagacity and power of scent. 
Disregarding all inferior quarry, they could discriminate, by 
the smell alone, what was called the warrantable game from 
the fawns which were not to be hunted, and the hinds when 
out of season for the chase. The instant a dog caught the 
Scent, he opened, and was joined in chorus by his fellows. 
But a few lines, often quoted, of our great dramatic poet, 
describe to the life the ancient Stag-hounds of England. 


“ My hounds are bred out of the Spartan kind, 
So flew’d, so sanded, and their heads are hung 


Sg ome a AR 


eee 


Se nn eet reer ea a 


With ears that sweep away the morning dew ; 
Craok-knee’d, and dew-lap’d, like Thessalian bulls ; 
Slow in pursuit; but matched in mouth like bells, 
Hach under each. <A cry more tuncable 

Was never halloo’d to, nor cheer’d with horn, 

In Crete, in Sparta, nor in Thessaly.” 


The Stag is still hunted in England, the animals, however, 


being merely taken from the preserves and parks, and turned 
out before the hounds. A few packs of stag-hounds are 
kept for this species of chase, which differs entirely in 
its character from the chase in any country where deer 
are found in the wild state. The great supporter of this 
sport, long after it had declined in public favour, was His 
Majesty George III, who was a bold rider, and who main- 
tained a pack of stag-hounds with royal magnificence. The 
dogs were nearly the same as the ancient Talbots; but 
his Majesty having received a present from the Duke of 
Richmond of a well-equipped pack, better suited for pursuit, 
the older race was discarded, for a smaller kind more swift 
of foot. 

With the progressive destruction of the wild deer, the 
practice was introduced of hunting the Fox by hounds in- 
stead of greyhounds ; and it was soon found that this animal 
was better suited than any other for the chase, such as could 
be practised in a cultivated country cleared of natural fo- 
rests. This new kind of chase gained continually in public 
favour ; and, in the reign of George the First, various packs 
of hounds, employed exclusively in the chase of the Fox, 
were established in different parts of the country. The dogs 
employed were a variety of the ancient stag-hound, but of 
smaller size, and which, being confined to one kind of game, 
acquired in a high degree the characters and discipline suited 
to their employment. ‘These older fox-hounds, however, still 
differed materially from the modern breed. They had the 

road muzzle, the wide chest, the short limbs, the hanging 
dewlap, and long pendent ears, of the ancient race, and dif- 
fered from it chiefly in bulk of body. They were admirable 


THE INDAGATOR GROUP. . TAL 


for the delicacy of their scent, the pertinacity with which 
they unravelled every maze of their prey, and the fine chorus 
of their united voices, so delightful to the ear of the older 


sportsmen of England. Time, however, and mixture of races, \ 
continually modified the form and characters of these dogs. 
They were rendered more swift, but with a loss of much of | 


the power of scent and patient habits of the older race. A 
new method of hunting was introduced, and at length finally 
established as the practice of the English hunting-field. In 
place of tracking the game to its retreat by the trail, at an 
early hour, and while yet the scent lay on the ground, the 
dogs were at once taken to the cover, and the fox being un- 
kennelled, he was run down by the combined power of scent 
and speed. Instead of the chase being continued hour after 
hour, often from sunrise to noon, the modern chase is a short 
and fiery gallop, rarely lasting, at its utmost speed, for more 


than thirty or forty minutes. To this kind of chase, entirely 
unlike that of any other country, the dogs have become | 
adapted in an eminent degree, and differ as much from the | 
former hounds of England as the modern greyhound from/ 


the ancient deer-hound. : 

The Fox-hound is not a peculiarly handsome dog, although, 
knowing him to be suited to his uses, the eye of the sports- 
man associates his form with symmetry and beauty. He is, 
on a medium, from 22 to 24. inches high at the shoulder. 
His muzzle is only moderately broad; his ears are pendu- 
lous without being very long; his fur is smooth, and gene- 
rally spotted with brown upon a white ground. He has great 
power of speed, and we should say that he had also great 
power of scent, did we not compare him with the race he has 
supplanted. He requires the restraint of careful discipline ; 
and hence it is that English fox-hounds have never succeeded 
in the hands of foreign masters. 

The term Harrier has been long employed in England to 
designate the hunting dogs chiefly employed in the chase of 
the Hare. It used to include different kinds of dogs, but 


742 : THE DOG. 


came at length to be exclusively applied to a race of hounds 
differing chiefly from the ancient fox-hounds in size. They 
were patient in the chase, and had admirable powers of scent, 
but were slow in their motions as compared with modern 
dogs of the same class. They were frequently followed by 
the country people on foot, who carried long poles in their 
hands by which they were enabled to make surprising leaps 
over brooks, ditches, and hedges. This species of sport was 
long a great source of enjoyment to the country people of 
England. The hare, it is to be observed, when pursued by 
the fleeter dogs, uses all its powers to reach a covert, avail- 
ing itself of hedges, ravines, and any inequalities of the 
ground, to elude the sight of its pursuers, so that it may gain 
upon them. When chased by hounds, however, the hare én- 
deavours to baffle the scent by doubling and a thousand ar- 
tifices, generally running in a circuit, so that she does not go 
far from the place where she has started ; hence, with the 
older harriers, the hare afforded a chase with which any one, 
however ill mounted, might keep up, and which even persons 
on foot could enjoy. With refinement in the mode of hunt- 
. ing, however, a swifter kind of dog was employed, and the 
chase changed its characters. It is now pursued in the same 
manner as the fox-chase ; and the hare being started is soon 
run down, having little time to pursue those wiles which 
used to put to proof the powers of scent of the dogs, and 
really constituted the spirit of the chase. Many packs of 
harriers are kept in the country ; but this kind of sport is 
not in the same favour as formerly, and is usually discouraged 
by the masters of fox-hounds, ag interfering with what is re- 
garded as the regular chase. 

The smallest of the races of hounds is the Bigle, or Beagle, 
apparently the Ayacseus of the Greek and Agasseus of the 
Roman Cynegetica. This diminutive hound may be reason- 
ably supposed to be derived in part from some of the smaller 
Canide of the warmer countries. It was known in the Bri- 
tish Islands from the earliest period at which we have any 


cneseieetaienetn aie eee a eT 


THE INDAGATOR GROUP. 743 


records of the chase, and was probably introduced by the — 
Romans. It was employed in the pursuit of rabbits and 


hares. It has a large head, long ears, and a shrill voice, 
which it uses in concert with its fellows. When in packs, 
these little dogs are wild, active, and pertinacious in pursuit, 
threading every maze of the game, and running with their 
muzzles close to the ground. They are now very varely to 
be seen, the habits of sportsmen leading them to prefer 
the more decisive practice of the modern chase. But it may 
be questioned whether much of the real enjoyment of the 
hunting-field is not lost to the people of the country by this 
change of tastes and habits. Every one cannot maintain a 
pack of harriers, and few are equal to the desperate riding 
which the modern fox-chase requires. But the squire of 
another age could enjoy the chase of his little pack of har- 
—yiers or beagles without too great a sacrifice. His own 
saddle-horse was sufficient for the slow and temperate chase, 
which afforded him a cheerful recreation; and John the 
butler, or Tom the groom, enacted sufficiently the parts of 
huntsman or whipper-in. 


II. Tuan Mure Hounp, comprehending the werayorres of 
the Greeks, the Canes tacité and ductores of the Latins, in- 
cluded races of dogs differing from one another, yet agree- 
ing in the common property of running silently upon their 
game. Of this class of dogs was the Lyemmer, Lymer or 
Lyme-hound of the English, so named, it is supposed, from 
Lyam, a leash, by which the dogs were conducted to the 
field. It included the dogs more especially employed by the 
fowler for capturing birds by means of nets and other de- 
vices, and it comprehends, accordingly, the modern Pointer 
and its congeners. 

The Pointer does not differ essentially in his characters 


from common hounds; and it may be supposed that almost any | 


race of the Indagator group, trained especially for scenting 
the game in silence, and stopping on approaching it, would 


744 THE DOG. ° 


become in time a true fowler’s breed. In England we early 
possessed dogs suited for fowling; and the pointer appears to 
have been derived from Spain, which is still noted for pro- 
ducing this class of dogs. The pointer was accordingly 
termed Spainyeart or Spaniel, though the true Spaniel is 
distinct from the Spanish Lyme-hound or Pointer, and ought 
not to be confounded with it. 

From whatever mixture of blood the Pointer may have 
been derived, yet being descended from animals habituated to 
a particular pursuit, the habit acquired by him has become, as 
it were, an instinct of the breed, so that the whelp of the true 
pointer scarcely needs even instruction to teach him to steal 
upon his game in silence, and stand when he approaches it. 
Education, indeed, is required to instruct him in the particu- — 

_ lar practices which the nature of the sport requires, but the 

| general habit may be said to be as natural to him as that of . 
\ pursuing game by the eye is to the greyhound, or by the 
| scent to the beagle. 

The term Setter is in England applied to different kinds 
of dogs employed in the chase of feathered game; and most 
of them have a relation more or less defined with the pointer. 
The Old English Setter, now rare, is a highly esteemed dog 
of this class, and has given birth to numerous varieties more 
or less approaching to it in characters. The Setters are by 
many sportsmen preferred to the pointers, as bein g more agile 
and enduring, and so better fitted for following game in a 
mountainous country ; but they require a longer course of dis- 
cipline than the pointers, and do not in the same degree trans- 
mit the habitudes impressed upon them to their offspring. 


Ill. Tou SPANIEL is a general name for certain races of 
beautiful dogs which we owe to the countries of the Mediter- 
ranean, and in which, it is probable, the blood of the African 
Canide has been mixed with that of the dogs of Western Asia 
and Kurope. From the great variety which this class of dogs 
presents, it is reasonable to believe that they are of mixed blood. 


THE INDAGATOR GROUP. 745 


But the Spaniel, which may be regarded as typical of the breed, 
appears to be proper to the African rather than the European 
_ side of the Mediterranean. It is known to us in this country 
by a diminutive variety, usually termed Charles the Second’s 
Breed. It has the body gracefully formed, the forehead rela- 
tively broad, the ears long, the eyes large and brilliant, the 
tail bushy, and the hair soft, curling, and silky. The feet 
_ are remarkably large, broad, and webbed, rendering it pro- 
bable that it was originally derived from a country of sands. It 
is found in numbers all along the Barbary coasts, and extends 
to Spain, Italy, and the islands of the Mediterranean, whence 
the finest spaniels have always been derived. Varieties of 
it are known to British sportsmen, as Springers and Cockers, 
characterized by their active habits, the delicacy of their 
smell, and their generally giving tongue when they come upon 
the game. 

Of all known dogs, the Spaniel is the most remarkable for 
its docile habits and affectionate temper. It will never turn 
against its master, but will lick his hand when he chastises 
it. It will watch the expression of his countenance, and at- 
tend him in his sick-room like a nurse. Even the Arabs find 
an excuse for fondling the Spaniel, by asserting that it is 
not a dog. It is not to be wondered at that the Spaniel 
has, of all our dogs, been admitted to the closest companion- 
ship with us; but it is strange that the very qualities which 
attach him to us have been made matter of reproach. To 
fawn like a spaniel, is an expression common not to one lan- 
guage, but tomany. But the fawning of the spaniel is the 
result of the gentle temperament with which he is endowed, 
and of his fidelity to his human protector. 

The Spaniel has been largely mixed in blood with other 
races; and many dogs are termed Spaniels which are only 
remotely related, or not related at all, to the true Spaniel. 


IV. The Barzart, or Water-Doe, Canis aviarius aquaticus 
of Linneus, has been spread from time immemorial over a 


a aneeeEaneE nae 


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i Hl 
t ii 
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746 THE DOG. 


great part of Europe. All the characters of this dog indi- 
cate that he is the creature of an aquatic situation, suited to 
find his prey in marshes, pools, and rivers, where water-fowls 
abound. His feet are webbed, and he swims and dives with 
rapidity and ease. His fur is Shaggy and curling, his ears 
are pendent, and his tail is short or rudimental. He is not 
a fierce dog, and avoids the combats to which other dogs are 
prone. He delights to fetch and carry, and is well adapted 
to the hunting of wild ducks and other aquatic birds, whose 
nests he ferrets out among the reeds in which they are con- 
cealed. He is used in this country as a retriever, i in districts 


of sedgy rivers and marshes, and on the coasts where the 


Shooting of sea-fowls is practised. He is a favourite with 
sailors, on account of his readiness to leap into the sea, and 
recover what has fallen overboard. 

The purest of this race are derived from the marshy coun- 
tries of Northern Europe and Asia. But the Barbet as- 
sumes a great variety of aspect, according to situation, and 
the uses to which he is habituated. He is large or small, 
according to the degree in which his muscular powers are 

called forth by exercise, and more or less covered with hair, 
according to the climate. When reared up as a household 
dog in our dwellings, the race progressively diminishes in 
size, and loses the rude and shaggy aspect distinctive of it 
in a state of greater liberty. The little Barbet of the French, 
termed by us a Poodle, is one of the most curious varieties 
of the race. It is wonderfully fitted to receive instruction of 
any kind, and even imitates the actions of persons about it. 
It is likewise a faithful dog, and manifests great cacuinmnss 
to its immediate master. 

A fine variety of the Barbet group is the English Water- 
Spaniel, popularly so called. The fur of this dog is short, 
curly, and usually of a deep brown colour, and his general 
aspect is mild and graceful. He is docile and sagacious, valued 
by the sportsman as a retriever, and capable of receiving any 
kind of instruction. The race has now become rare. It was 


THH INDAGATOR GROUP. 747 


probably produced by a mixture of the blood of the Barbet 
with that of the Old English Setter. 


V. Tue TERRIER forms a class rather than a breed of 
dogs. It is more nearly related to the Lyciscan than to any 
of the other groups, and can only be included in the class of 
hounds on account of its performing some services in the 
chase in common with these animals. Its habits Seem to 
connect it with the burrowing Canide; and the most probable 


= supposition as to its origin is that it has been produced by a 


mixture of blood of some of those Species, as the Jackal, 
or even Common-fox, with the domesticated dogs of different 
countries. But however produced, dogs which we call terriers, 
though differing greatly from one another, are widely diffused, 
being found from the high lands of Central Asia to the western 


limits of Europe. They have the common property of prey- 
ing on such animals as form their dwellings under ground, | 


as the rabbit, the polecat, the weasel, the otter, the badger, 


the fox, and will pursue these animals to their subterranean j 
_ retreats, which no other dog will do. To the weasel tribes, 


in particular, the terrier manifests the fiercest antipathy; and 
he is the only known kind of dog that seems especially des- 
tined to prey on these animals, which he pursues for the 
mere purpose of destroying, since he shews no disposition to 
devour them. This singular temperament of the terrier has 
rendered him a useful servant in wild countries ; and, even 
in those which are populous and improved, his hatred to 
rats, and other animals termed vermin, is often turned to 
account. 

In the British Islands, the Terrier has been cultivated 
from times of unknown antiquity, yet we cannot say that the 
terriers of this country form a true breed, since they differ 
from one another almost as much as races which we hold to 
be distinct. The terriers of the Western Islandg of Scotland 
have long lank hair, almost trailing to the ground. Those of 


the Central Highlands, which formed the ancient shepherd’s 


caperene 


ARTES I. 
Sorceaenagoe 


a 

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— roe ay aoe es ile 
eee sasacersiakanesamanneeene a 


748 THE DOG. 


dogs of the country, are rough, shaggy, and not unlike the 
‘ older Deer-hounds in general form. The terriers of England 
have a smooth fur, sub-erect ears, a thick skin, a stout body, 
and short limbs. 

A favourite sport of the common people of England was 
the chase of polecats, badgers, foxes, and other burrow- 
ing animals which formerly abounded. After the greater 
part of these animals were destroyed, the terrier was 
reared in considerable numbers, for the disgusting sport 
of baiting animals, especially the badger and polecat, and 
even for worrying the wild and common cats. There was 
searcely a village in which some unfortunate victim of this 
kind was not nightly sacrificed ; and such was the grossness 
of manners, until within little less than a century past, 
that persons of every rank took delight in these barbarous 
spectacles. When the regular fox-chase was established, 
terriers were employed for unearthing the fox; but, in the 
modern chase, this practice is nearly abandoned, and few 
of our present packs are accompanied by terriers. The ter- 
rier is now chiefly cultivated as a household dog. He has 
nothing of the winning habits, the gentleness, and docility 


of the spaniel; but he has a certain rough fidelity, which, 


with his courage, renders him a general favourite. The 
’ s 

blood of the terrier has been largely mixed with other races, 

forming a numerous class of curs. 


Such are the divisions under which we may conveniently 
arrange the varied races of domesticated dogs. But it must 
be held sufficient, for the present, to have pointed out such a 
classification as may exhibit the general distinctions and re- 
lations of the more important groups. To have described 
the subordinate varieties, with the detail which a complete 
history of the Dog would require, would have greatly ex- 
ceeded the limits which could be assigned to the subject in 
the present work. ‘It is trusted, however, that the history 


py 
a 


CONCLUSION. 749 


of this animal has been pursued to the degree of shewing 


that it inyolves many subjects of curiosity and interest. Of 
all the animals that have been subjected to our power, the 
Dog is that whose condition and faculties we have the best 
means of observing. No creature more distinctly shews the 
power of external agents to affect the form of the body, and 


react upon the attributes which, even in the lower animals, ° 


we may term mental. The Dog, we have seen, when inured 
to the exercise of certain muscular powers, acquires, within 
given limits, the conformation of parts which adapts him to 
the services to which he is habituated. The Sledge-dog of 
the Laplander becomes fitted for tasks under which other 
dogs would perish; while a dog of the same descent, used 
only for the care of flocks, becomes the common Shepherd’s 


Dog. The Bull-dog acquires the powerful jaws, and oes 


limbs, which fit him for subduing the animal to which he is 
opposed, and with this conformation, he assumes the fierce- 


ness and resolution which such a service demands. The’ 


Greyhound, inured to the chase of the mountain stag, ac- 
quires and maintains a robuster form than the dog of the 


‘same race, used to the chase of the feebler game. The Dog 


habituated to the destruction of the wolf, when withdrawn 


from this pursuit, loses by degrees the strength and courage 


which formerly characterised his race; and dogs of every | 
sort, which are not required to exercise their muscular — 


powers, but are reared up as playthings in an artificial state, 
become so diminutive and feeble, that they could not exist 
were they not continually protected by us. We cannot ima- 
gine that a creature so helpless as a pug-dog could exist in 


the state of nature; nor can we assign any other cause for | 


its having become what it is, than the progressive adapta- 
tion of its race to the artificial condition in which it has 
been reared. Such effects, indeed, are not proper to the dog, 
but have been observed in the case of all the animals which 
we have subjected to domestication. They are seen even in 


_ Some of the lower orders. Thus, certain little fishes of the 


ae at 


eT aaa aT 


= 


ET TAT 


750 THE DOG. 


minnow tribe, having been put when young into a small jar 
of water, never increased in size, but remained suited, in 
their dimensions, to-the little space allotted to them. After 
the lapse of nine years, they were transferred to a larger 
jar, and immediately began to increase in bulk of body, until 
they attained their natural size. The progressive adapta- 
tion of the Dog, then, to new conditions of life, presents no 
anomaly, but illustrates a law common in the animal king- 
dom, though, as the changes produced in his physical con- 
formation exert a sensible action on his temperament, habits, 
and faculties, they are calculated to excite peculiar interest. 
Whether we assume that all dogs have been derived from 
some common stock, and have acquired their distinctive cha- 
racters under the effects of domestication, or whether we 
assume that they have acquired the characters which we 
term specific in the state of nature, we equally reason upon 
the assumption that the animals have, in a certain degree, 
become adapted, with respect to form and attributes, to the 
conditions affecting them. 

As the natural history of the Dog may supply us with 
subjects for physiological inquiry, so it may afford us matter 
for reflection regarding the mental attributes of the Dog in 
particular, and of the lower orders of animals in general. 
Eager disputes, it is known, have arisen, in every period of 
metaphysical inquiry, regarding the precincts of Instinct and 
Reason. By not a few philosophers it has been contended, 
that the actions of all the animals inferior to man are the 
result solely of what is termed instinct, and that these crea- 
tures have not the power to compare, to reflect, to will, or to 
draw conclusions of any sort, but are impelled by the train 
of their ideas, or by some unknown influence, to act precisely 
as they do. But does our observation of the Dog afford the 
least support to such a hypothesis, or rather, does it not 
refute it at every point? Not only do we recognise in this 
creature senses like our own, and, in certain cases, more 
perfect than ours, but we see these senses adapted by 


| 


PER 


CONCLUSION. - 751 


the animal itself to every varying contingency. We see, 
by a thousand actions, that he has the sense of pleasure 
and pain, and can express his emotions by signs and sounds 
of the voice intelligible to his fellows and often to us. We see 
that he is resentful for wrongs, and may take revenge; and 
that he is grateful for benefits, and manifests his sense of 
them by the services he renders us. We know that he com- 
prehends our commands, and employs the fitting means 
to perform them; and that he has a memory of times and 
events, and draws conclusions from what he remembers, as 
well as from what passes before his eyes. He can thus 
will, compare, draw conclusions, and adapt means to the 
ends which he seeks to attain. If these powers be not at- 
tributes of the reasoning faculty, in what category are they 
to be placed? They cannot surely be instinctive, for then | 
we Should be forced to hold, that similar faculties were, in 
man himself, instinctive. Can it be said, as has again and 
again been done, that brutes do not form abstract ideas, 
and therefore cannot reason? But how do we know that 
brutes do not form abstract ideas, as they are called, to the 
degree which their own powers of reasoning require? They 
act precisely as if they did. A dog can avail himself of ex- 
perience ; but, to apply the results of experience to any kind 
of actions, necessarily implies the exercise of memory, and 
a certain degree of generalization or abstraction. If the Dog 
reasoned only from particulars, and never from generals, how 
should he apply his knowledge of height, distance, time, and 
place, to the actions which we see him continually perform. 
He could not know that a wall was too high for him to leap 


over unless he tried to leap over this particular wall. But he | | 


knows, by the height of a wall, though he may never have 
Seen it, that itis too high for him to scale; and if this be not 
abstraction or generalization, we ask what itis? Whether 
the Dog can form the abstract conception of right and wrong, 
our limited means of communication with him do not enable 
us to determine ; but he knows when he has committed an 


ann antic Teta siete 


752 THE DOG. 


offence, though no human eye may have seen him commit it. 
Some metaphysicians, indeed, affirm, that we can only reason 


‘from generals by means of words or signs; but is a person 


born deaf and dumb incapable of reasoning from generals ? 
Has not such a person an idea of time, place, and distance, 
though he has no sound of the voice with which to associate his 


ideas? The Dog has probably no sound of the voice to express 
his conception of distance, time, and place, but he has corres- 
ponding ideas to the degree necessary to compare one distance 
with another, one period of time with another, and to know 
and distinguish places. He knows the period required to pass 
over a given space to a minute, can count recurring intervals 


of time with precision, and knows, of place, that which enables 
him to actas if he had a term to express his conception of it. 

The power, indeed, of abstraction or generalization, is 
probably very limited in the inferior animals; but yet it 
must be believed to exist to the degree of enabling them to 
compare, to reflect, and to draw conclusions, to the extent 
to which they exercise these faculties. But even if we were 
to admit the position that dogs and other animals cannot 
form abstract conceptions, notions, or ideas, that would not 
shew that they did not reason, but merely that their power 
of reasoning did not extend to the degree of forming such 
conceptions, notions, or ideas. 

The singular tendency, distinctive of the metaphysical re- 
searches of certain philosophers, to reduce the numberless 
creatures which a gracious Providence has been pleased to 
call into being, into mere machines, destitute of the power of 
thought and reflection, seems to have its origin in the mis- 
taken notion that we can exalt the human species by degrad- 
ing all the others. But surely the chasm between the mental 
attributes of man and those of all other animated creatures is 
too wide to give us cause to fear that they can be confounded. 
The inferior animals may compare, may reflect, may will, 
may adapt means to ends, nay, may possess the faculty of 
abstraction to the degree of allowing them to exercise the 

2 


a 


ee 


~ CONCLUSION. 753 


reasoning powers with which they are furnished, and yet be 
placed so far beneath the human species in all the attributes 
which we term mental, as to indicate that a far different -des- 
tify has been ordained for Man and for them in the scheme 
of Universal Providence. The faculties which we term 
Instinct in the lower animals, are perfect with relation to 
the ends to be served, but do not admit of continued improve- 


* ment; and ail the knowledge which these animals can ac- » 


quire by means of experience and instruction, is as nothing, 
when compared to that at which improvable reason can ar- 
rive. Even in what relates to the mere supply of animal 
wants, scarcely a parallel can be drawn between the endow- 
ments of man and the inferior animals. Not one of them 
can construct a wheel, a screw, or the simplest machine, or 


_ form the rudest weapon for capturing its prey: not one of 


them has acquired the art of clothing itself, or ministering 
to its wants by other means than the Instincts with which 
Nature has already supplied it: not one of them has learned 


_ the means of warming its body by fire, or procuring for itself 


an artificial day, when the light of the sun is withdrawn. 
Man alone has the power of associating every idea which 
arises in his mind with signs and sounds, and thus he alone 
can connect proposition with proposition to the remoter con- 
sequences. He alone can cultivate science and improve the 
arts, and communicate to another age the results of his rea- _ 
Soning and experience. He alone, of all living creatures, 
can distinguish right from wrong, and truth from falsehood, 
in the degree which can render him an accountable being: 
And he alone, we must believe, can trace, in the works of 
Nature, the harmony of universal design, and so be conduct- 


ed to the conclusion that there is a First Cause, and an Om- 


nipotent Providence. 


INDEX. 


Aberdeenshire Breed of Cattle, Polled, 


315—general characters of the Cattle 


of Aberdeenshire, 316—recent for- 
mation of the Polled breed, and the 
improvement of which it is suscep- 
tible, 2b. 317 — introduction of the 
Short-horned breed into the county, 
817—character of the Cattle occupy- 
ing the district extending northward 
from Aberdeenshire to the Pentland 
Frith, 2b. 

4igagrus, description of the, 9—its affi- 
nity with the domestic Goats, 7b. 

Aguara, Maned, 661. 

Alderney Breed of Cattle, 383—its 1 na- 
turalization in the Norman Islands 
of the British Channel, 7b.—impor- 
tation of the Cows into England for 
the purposes of the Dairy, 7d.—exter- 
nal characters of the breed, and its 
excellent milking properties, 334— 
account of the Islands of the Chan- 
nel; the minute division of property 


in land, and the effects on the prac- | 


tices of rural industry; the value 
attached to the Cow by the inhabi- 
tants; and the law of the insular 
legislature for preserving the purity 
of the race, 334-9. 

Alpine Ibex, natural history of the, 5 
—its susceptibility of domestication, 


American Family of Mankind, xliv. 

Anglesea Breed of Cattle, 306—its affi- 
nity with the Pembroke breed ; its 
larger size and coarser form, 7b. 

Breed of Sheep, 69 — its affi- 
nity with the Soft-woolled Sheep of 
Wales, ib. 

Angus Breed of Cattle, Polled, 312— 
its cultivation in the plains and less 
elevated parts of the counties of For- 


far and Kincardine, 
exportation of the cattle to the graz- 
ing counties of England, ¢6.—compa- 
rison of their characters with those 
of the Galloway breed, ib.—the im- 
provement of the breed, and its 
recent extension to other districts, 
313—notice of a prevalent error re- 
garding the comparative value of 
different breeds of Cattle, 2b.—the in- 
troduction of the Short-horned breed 
into the district, and the propriety 
of keeping it distinct from the native 
breed, 315. 

Animal Kingdom, divisions of the: 
the Radiata, xxiv—the Articulata, 
xxy.—the Mollusca, xxvi—the Ver- 
tebrata, comprehending Fishes, Rep- 
tiles, Birds, and Mammalia, xxvii— 
division of the Mammalia into the fol- 
lowing tribes: Cetacea, xxxii—Ru- 
minantia, 2b.—Pachydermata, xxxiii 
—Solidungula, 7b. — Edentata, 2b.— 
Rodentia, xxxiv—Marsupialia, 7b,— 
Carnivora or Fer, 7b.—Insectivora, 
ib. —Cheiroptera, 7b.—Quadrumana, 
xxxv — Bimana, 2b. — the different 
races of Mankind: the Caucasian Fa- 
mily, xxxviii—the Mongolian Family, 
xl—the Malay or Polynesian Family, 
xli—the Negro Family, ¢b.—the Ame- 
rican Family, xliv—inquiry into the 
origin of these Gifferent races, xlyv— 
examples of the effect of climate in 
modifying the animal form, and 
adapting it to new conditions of life, 
li—the effect of increased supplies of 
food in changing the form, and with 
that the instincts and habits, of ani- 
mals; and examples of this in the case 
of the Dog, lii—of the Wild Hog. 76.— 
of the Ox and Sheep, liii—of the Wild 


2b.—the large 


Ey 


nang 


756 INDEX. 


u 


Goose, ib.—of the Wild Duck, liv— 
of the Gallinaceous Fowls, lv—exam- 
ples of the effect of temperature, hu- 
midity, altitude, and peculiar habi- 
tudes, in modifying the animal form, 
ly-lix—examples of the faculty pos- 
sessed by animals of transmitting ac- 
quired properties to their progeny, 
lix — the permanence of the cha- 
racters acquired by varieties; and 
examples of this in the case of the 
human species, and the domesticated 
quadrupeds, lxi—examples of the ef- 
fect of continued reproduction be- 
tween animals closely allied in blood, 
in producing a similarity of charac- 
ters, and, likewise, in impairing the 
constitution of the animals, lxiii—the 
natural provision for obviating the 
effects of unsuitable alliances of ani- 
mals in the state of liberty, lxiv—ex- 
amples of the power of animals to 
transmit their instincts and habits 
to their descendants, 7b. — exam- 
ples of the faculty possessed by ani- 
mals of communicating peculiarities 
of conformation, occasioned by muti- 
lation, to their descendants, Ixvii— 
inquiry into the distinction between 
a Species and a Variety, 7d. 
Antelope, Wool-bearing, 10, 
Argali, Asiatic, 23. 
Bearded, 24. 

Arnee of India, 218. 

Ass, Wild, natural history of the, 436— 
his early subjugation, and the effects 
of domestication on his temperament 
and habits, 439—his special adaptation 
to the temperate and warmer cli- 
mates, and notices of the breeds of 
Eastern and Southern countries, 441 
—his naturalization in the New 
World, 443—his abundance in the 
British Islands, and the importance 
of directing attention to his proper 
cultivation, 7b. a 

Ayrshire Breed of Cattle, 339—former 
rudeness of the agriculture of Ayr- 
shire, 340—characters of the older 
breed of the country; and inquiry 
into the origin of the existing Dairy 
breed, 342—its external characters, 
and superior milking properties, 343 
—its extension to other districts of 
Scotland, 344—result of crossing it 


with the Shori-horned breed; and 


the propriety of maintaining the 
purity of the native breed, 2b. 


Babiroussa of the Indian Islands, na- 
tural history of the, 396—its capabi- 
lity of domestication, 397, 

Barbet or Water-Dog, 745. 

Beagle, 742. 

Belocchistan, Dog of, 647. 

Berkshire Breed of Swine, 431—its size, 
colour, and aptitude to fatten, ib.—ef- 
fect of crossing with the Chinese 
breeds in lessening its size, and in- 
creasing the delicacy of the pork, 432 
—the limits to the profitable diminu- 
tion of the size of the Old Swine of 
England, and the facility with which 
their defective characters might be 
removed by careful selection of the 
breeding parents, ib.—inexpediency 
of the practice of crossing them with 
the Wild Hog, 433. 

Bison, American, natural history of the, 
211—its fitness for domestication, 213. 

——— European, natural history of 
the, 208—its incapability of submit- 
ting to domestication, 210. 

Black-faced Heath Breed of Sheep, 84 
—description of the heathy moun- 
tains from which it is derived, ib,— 
its diffusion over all the mountains of 
Scotland, 85—its external characters 
and fattening properties, and the ex- 
cellence of its mutton, 86—its pecu- 
liar adaptation toa country of heaths, 
87—the coarseness of its wool, ib.— 
variety of size and aspect presented 
by these sheep in different districts, 
#b—method of rearing and treating 
them in the mountainous countries 
which they inhabit, 88—results of 
crossing them with the Cheviot, Lei- 
cester, and South Down breeds, 91— 
economical importance of the breed, 
and the means of improving it, 92. 

Black Horse, Old English, 608—its re- 
semblance to the race of the same co- 
lour existing in the countries of the 
Lower Rhine, the Meuse, and the 
Scheldt, 609—its naturalization in 
England from the Humber tothe Cam, 
and its extension westward through 
the midland counties to the Severn, 
and southward into the countries of 
the Chalk, 76.—external characters of 
the older race, and the improvement 


sik tnd ene th naan — 


INDEX. 757 


effected on it by the introduction of 
the same race from Holland, 610— 
description of the modern Black 
Horse; its great physical power, but 
deficiency in speed and action, 611— 
its extensive employment in the cen- 
tral and southern counties for the 
labours of the field, and for waggons 
and heavy carriages, 7b.—the Dray- 
horses of London, 612— improve- 
ments of which the breed is suscep- 
tible, 613. 

Blood-hound, Old British, 734, 

Boar, Masked African, 397—its capabi- 
lity of domestication, 76. 

Buansa of Nepaul, 648. 

Buffalo, Cape, natural history of the, 
223—on the possibility of domesticat- 
ing it, 229. 

Buffalo, Common, natural history of 
the, 218 —its economical value in the 
state of servitude, 219—its diffusion 
over the warmer countries of Asia 
and Europe, 220—inquiry as to the 
period of its introduction into Hu- 
rope, 221—its exténsive domestica- 
tion in Italy, and its great value to 
the inhabitants, ib.—inexpediency of 
attempting to naturalize it in the 
colder countries, 222. 

Bull-dog, 728. 

Butter. See Dairy and Milk. 


Carding, description of the process of, 

for preparing wool for being spun 
into woollen yarn, 45. 

Caucasian Family of Mankind, xxxviii. 

Ibex, 8—its probable iden- 
tity with the Ibex of the Alps of 
Europe, 

Cavalry Horse, 604. 

Cheese. See Dairy and Milk. 

Cheviot Breed of Sheep, 93—its deri- 
vation from a range of mountains 
in the north of England, 7b. — its 
external characters and fattening 
properties, and the goodness of its 
mutton, 94—its hardiness, adapta- 
tion toa country of mountains where 
the grasses are produced, and its wide 
diffusion, ib., 95—the weight and qua- 
lity of its fleece, 96—the method of 
rearing and treating the sheep in 
the mountainous countries which 
they inhabit, 2b—the means of pro- 


viding winter supplies of food for 
them by the formation of watered 
meadows and otherwise, 102—the 
importance of draining and enclo- 
sures in improving their mountain 
pastures, ib.—the danger incurred by 
them from tempests and falls of 
snow, and the means of providing 
shelter by the forming of planta- 
tions or the erection of stelis, 103— 
great economical importance of the 
breed, and the attention of breeders 
to its improvement, 113—the results 
of crossing it with the Leicester and 
South Down breeds, ib. 

Cleveland Bay Breed of Horses, 602— 
its adaptation to coaches, chariots, &c., 
ib.—formation of the breed by the 
progressive ‘mixture of the blood of 
the Race-horse with the larger horses 
of the country, ¢b.—the great demand 
which exists for it in London and 
other opulent towns, and the large 


exportation of it to other countries, 7b, © 


—the crossing of it by Hunters and 
Thorough-bred Horses, and the pro- 
duction of Coach-horses of a yet 
lighter standard, 7b. 

Clydesdale Breed of Horses, 615—its 
affinity with the Black Horse of Hol- 
land and the Netherlands. 616—its 
size, colour, form, and superior pow- 
ers of draught, 617—extensive diffu- 
sion of the breed, and its great eco- 
nomical value, 7d., 618. 

Coach-horse, the Old English, 601—the 
modern, 2b. 

Combing, description of the process of, 
for preparing wool for being spun 
into worsted yarn, 44. 

Connamara Breed of Horses, 523—its 
Spanish origin; the neglect of the 
breed, and the means of improving it, 
ab. 

Cotswold Breed of Sheep, 186—account 
of the district of the Cotswold Hills, 
and notices of their former occupa- 
tion by a race of fine-woolled Sheep, 
ib.—the modern breed of the Cots- 
wold Hills distinct from the former 
race, and opinion as to the time and 
mode of its introduction, 187—the 
changes which it has undergone by 
admixture with the New Leicester 
breed, its size, the weight and quality 


na iittala 


738 


of its fleece, and the prolificness of the 
females, 189. 


Dairy, the various destinations of the, 
279—its management when designed 
for the supply of Milk, 280—for the 
production of Butter, 281—and for 
the manufacture of Cheese, 285— 
the cheeses of different districts: of 
Gloucestershire, 290 — of Somerset- 
shire and North Wiltshire, 291—of 
Cheshire, Shropshire, and Lancashire, 
292—of the counties of York, Dur- 
ham, Northumberland, and Derby, ib. 
—of Stilton, Cottenham, and South- 
am, 293—of Ayrshire, Renfrewshire, 
and Lanarkshire, 7b.—great import- 
ance of the Dairy as supplying a large 
part of the food of the people, 295. 
Dartmoor Forest Breed of Sheep, 82— 
its small size and long soft wool, its 
wild and restless habits, and the ex- 
cellence of its mutton, 76—rapid di- 
minution in the number of the pure 
breed, from crossing with the Leicess 
ter and South Down breeds, 2b. 


INDEX. 


form and habits, according to the ser- 
vices for which he is employed, and 
his peculiar race, 672 —his habits 
as affected by those of the people 
amongst whom he lives, 675—the 
acuteness of his senses of hearing and 
smell, 677—his memory of places, 
times, and events, 678—his delight in 
the exercise of his natural powers, 
679—his faculty of distinguishing 
colours, 680—his aptitude to receive 
instruction, 681—his faculty of com- 
prehending the meaning of short sen- 
tences, ib.—his power of communicat- 
ing his wishes and purposes to his 
fellows, 685—his remarkable power 
of observation, 16.—anecdotes of the 
sagacity displayed by him under dif- 
ferent circumstances, 686—his ca- 
pability of learning arts of deception, 
688—his gratitude for benefits, and 
resentment of injuries, 690—his at- 
tachment to man, and fidelity to his 
immediate master, 693—the Rabies, 
or Madness of the Dog; and the symp- 
toms attending the communication 
of the disease to the human spe- 


Deeb, Egyptian, 646, 
‘Denmark, Great Dog of, 723. 
Devon Breed of Cattle, 345—resem- 


cies, ib. 
Dogs, wild races of : the Egyptian Deeb, 


blance of the older breeds of the coun- 
ties of Devon and Cornwall to the 
cattle of the Welsh Mountains, ib.— 
naturalization of the Devon breed in 
the high lands of Devonshire on the 
southern side of the Bristol Channel, 
¢b.—its external characters and afii- 
nity to the ancient White Forest 
breed, 346—smallness of the females, 
and their deficiency in the power of 
yielding milk, 7b—the admirable 
adaptation of the cattle to the pur- 
poses of active labour, 347—the de- 
fects of their form, and the gradual 
removal of them through the increas- 
ed attention of the breeders, ¢b., 348— 
the adherence of the breeders to the 
red colour of the hair, and its effect 
in ensuring the purity of the breed, 
349—the South Devon variety of this 
Breed; its larger size and coarser 
form, 350. 


646—the Fennecs or Zerdas of Africa, 
7b.—the Dog of Beloochistan, 647 
—the Buansa of Nepaul, 648—the 
Dholes of India, 7b.—the Dingo of 
New Holland, 649—the Wild Canidse 
of America, 659—examination of the 
different theories advanced respect- 
ing the origin of all the domesticated 
races. 663—classification of the domes- 
ticated races, 699. 


Dorset Breed of Sheep, 122—its exter- 


nal characters, the quality of its 
wool, and the goodness of its mutton, 
ib.—the faculty of the females of re- 
ceiving the male at different seasons, 
and their employment on this account 
for the rearing of house-lambs, 123— 
resemblance in the form of this breed 
to the Spanish Merino, 74.—diminu- 
tion of its numbers in consequence 
of the introduction of the Leicester 
and South Down breeds, or of cross- 


ing with them, 124. 

Drover’s Dog, 710. 

Dziggithai, natural history of the, 452 
—his capability of domestication, 2. 


Dholes of India, 648. 

Dingo of New Holland, 649. 

Dog, early subjugation and history of 
the, 667—the great diversity in his 


INDEX. 759 


Exmoor Forest Breed of Sheep, 88— 

- its small size and wild habits, the 
character of its wool, and excellence 
of its mutton, 2b.—gradual diminu- 
tion in the numbers of the pure 
breed from the effects of crossing, 
and the introduction of the Cheviot 
breed, ib.—notice of other races allied 
to it, 2b. 


Falkland Breed of Cattle, 328—the 

- mixed descent and characters of the 
cattle of Fifeshire, ii.—early estab- 
lishment of the Falkland Breed at 
the ancient royal manor of Falkland, 
and its resemblance to the Black 
Dairy Breed of Holland, 330—its near 
extinction in consequence of inter- 
mixture with the common races of 
the district, 331—means of improving 
the mixed cattle of Fifeshire, 332— 
character of the cattle occupying the 
district extending westward from 
Fifeshire to the Ochil Hills, 333. 

¥ennecs or Zerdas of Africa, 646. 

Forest Sheep of England, 80—the 
ancient Forests of England, and the 
general characters of the races of 
Sheep inhabiting them, ib., 81—the 
Sheep of Cannock Chase and of Dela- 
mere Forest, 81—the Sheep of Dart- 
moor Forest, 82—the Sheep of Ex- 
moor Forest, and other races allied 
to them, 83. 

Fox, Common, natural history of the, 
654—his power of procreating with 
the domesticated Dogs, 656. 

Fox-hound, 740. 


Galloway Breed of Cattle, 317—its 
naturalization in the south-western 
parts of Scotland, 318—its external 
characters, and adaptation to the 
countries in which it is reared, 7b.— 
excellence of its flesh, and its inferior 
milking properties, 7.—the absence 
of horns in this breed, and origin of 

_the peculiarity, 319—extensive ex- 
portation of the cattle for the supply 
of the English markets, 7b,—general 
management of the breed in its native 
district, 321—failure of the attempts 
to improve it by crossing with other 
breeds, and the importance of attend- 
ing to the careful cultivation of the 
breed in the pure state, ib. 


| 
| 


Gaur of British India, 208. 

Gayal or Jungle Ox, natural history of 
the, 230—its domestication in the 
countries of the East, 231. 

Gaze-hound, Old, 722. 

Glamorgan Breed of Cattle, 356—na- 
ture of the country in which it is na- 
turalized, ib.—its affinity with the 
Pembroke and its allied breeds, 357 
—difference in the size and figure of 
the cattle as they are the natives of 
the hilly country or of the lower and 
maritime, 358—excellent milking pro- 
perties of the Cows, 359—remarks 
on the supposed deterioration of the 


breed in consequence of intermixture | 
with other races, b—attention of the - 


present breeders to the improvement 
of the native race, and the propriety 
of keeping it distinct from the Short- 
horned and Ayrshire breeds which 
have been introduced into the dis- 
trict, 360. 

Goat, its natural relations with the An- 
telope tribes and the Sheep, 2—chief- 

ly distinguished from the Sheep by 
general aspect and habitudes, 3—its 
early subjugation and diffusion in the 
countries of Asia and Europe, 7b.— 
the Wild species: the Alpine Ibex, 5 
—the Caucasian and Siberian Ibices, 
8—the Nubian or Abyssinian Ibex, 7b. 
—the Aigagrus, 9—the Jemlah Goat, 
ib.—the Jahral Goat, 10—question of 
the origin of the domesticated races, 
11—influence of climate in modifying 
its characters, 12—its habits in the 
domesticated state, 16—prolificness of 
the female, 18—its milk, hair, skin, 
and flesh, 19—causes of its diminished 
cultivation in Britain, 20—economi- 
cal uses to which it may be rendered 
subservient, ib. 

Goats of Thibet, 12—of China and Hin- 
dostan, 14—of Angora, ib.—of Syria 
and Nepaul, 15— of Africa, 7b.—of 
the countries of the Mediterranean, 
of Greece and the Islands of the Ar- 
chipelago, of Italy, of Spain and Por- 
tugal, of France, and of the northern 


countries of Europe, 16—of the High- ° 


lands of Scotland, Wales, and Ire- 
land, 20. 

Greyhound, early history and origin of 
the, 715-7—his peculiar conformation, 
718—the ancient races of the British 


INDEX. 


760 


Islands, and the purposes for which 
they were employed, 719—early esta- 
blishment of coursing-matches, and 
their influence in perfecting the cha- 
racters of the British Greyhound, 720, 


Belgium, Germany, France, Sweden, 
and Russia, 2.—the Breeds of the 
Highlands and Islands of Scotland, 
429_the Breeds of Yorkshire, Lin- 
colnshire, and Norfolk, 480—of Suf. 
folk and Essex, ib.—of Northampton, 
Hackney, 604. : Shropshire, and Rudgwick, 431—of 
Hanover, cream-coloured Horses of, Berkshire, 75.—the Maltese and Nea. 
604, politan Breeds, 433, 
Hare Indian Dog, 660. Horse, description of the bones and ex- 
Harrier, 741. ternal muscles of the, Ixxi-lxxxij— 


Herefordshire Breed of Cattle, 362 
notice of the older cattle of the county 
of Hereford, and their general affinity 
with the races of Pembroke, Devon, 
Sussex, and Glamorgan, 1.—forma- 
tion of the modern breed by Mr Ben- 
Jamin Tomkins, and the principles 
of breeding adopted by him, 363—the 
high reputation of the breed, and its 
Progressive diffusion, 365—its exter. 
nal characters; its adaptation to the 
purposes of grazing, but indifferent 
milking properties, 366—the progress 
of the Short-horned Breed into the 
county; and the comparative merits 
of the two breeds, 367. 
Hog, form of the, and the characters 
indicative of the fattening property, 
cexi—his early history, and the singu- 
lar diversities of feeling with regard 
to the use of his flesh, 411—his uni- 
versal extension over the Old Conti- 
nent, and his multiplication in the 
New; his amazing powers of in- 
crease, 414-5—the erroneous Opinions 
entertained regarding his conforma- 
tion and habits, 416—his vast import- 
ance as a means of subsistence to the 
human race, 421—the modes of rear- 
ing and fattening him with relation | 
to his economical uses, 422, / 
—— Wild, natural history of the, 401 | 
—his former abundance in the woods | 
of Britain, and his existence at pre- | 
sent in the forests of various coun- | 
tries of Europe, 404—accounts of the 
hunting of this animal in the coun- 
tries of the East, 405—the remark- 
able changes effected on his form and 
. habits under the influence of domes- 
tication, 408, 
Hogs, Siamese Breed of, 425 — the 
Breeds of the Island of Papua or | 
New Guinea, and the South Sea | 
Islands, 428—the Breeds of Holland, | 


his suitable conformation, whether 


designed forthe exercise of the powers 
of speed or of draught, Ixxxiii—in- 


-quiry into the origin and early his- 


tory of the domesticated, 456 — hig 
form, habitudes, and instincts, 463— 
influence of climate and food on his 
form and temperament, 468—the va. 
riety in the colour of his hair, 469. 


Horses of Africa, 470—of Barbary, 472 


of the countries of the Euxine and 
Caspian, 473—of Arabia, 474of Per- 
sia and Caubul, 481—of India and 
Thibet, 482-4 — of China, Indo- 
China, and the Eastern Islands, 
484 — of Chinese and Independent 
Tartary, 486 — of Siberia, 488 — of 
the Ukraine, 2b. — of ancient and 
modern Greece, 489—of ancient and 
modern Italy, 490—of Spain, 491—of 
France, 492— of Germany, Denmark, 
Holland, and Flanders, 493—of Scan- 
dinavia, 494—naturalization of the 
Horse in America; his escape from 
human control, and multiplication 
in the state of liberty; the habits 
of the emancipated herds, and the 
modes of capturing them, 494—ac. 
quisition of the Horse by the In- 
dians, and the remarkable conse- 
quences, 499—Horses of South Ame- 
rica, 501—of Mexico, of Canada, of 
the United States, and of the West 
India Islands, 501-3— Horses of the 
British Islands, 503—their employ- 
ment in war-chariots by the ancient 
Celta, in the manner of the nations of 
the Hast, ib. — the colonization of 
Western Europe by the Celtx and 
Teutones ; and the occupation of 
the British Islands by the former 
people atthe time of the Roman Inva- 
sion, 504—account of the Roman In- 


‘vasion and the Saxon Colonization, 


and the small influence of these 


+ INDEX, 761 


events in altering the characters of 
the ancient Horses, 506-9—the im- 
portant changes effected onthe Horses 
of England after the Norman Con- 
quest, by the importation of the 
Horses of foreign countries, 509— 
the institution of the Course, and 
its effect in forming a race of 
Horses destined exclusively for run- 
ning, and employed tv communi- 
cate their properties to the inferior 
races, 512—Horses of the Zetland 
Islands; their resemblance to the 
Horses of Norway, and mixed line- 
age; their diminutive size and va- 
rious colours; their sagacity and 
docility, 514—Horses of the Orkney 
Islands; their small size and various 
colours, 516—Horses of the Outer and 
Inner Hebrides, 517—of the High- 
lands of Scotland, 519—of Wales, id. 
of Dartmoor, Exmoor, Hampshire, 
and the older Forests of England, 
520-— the Pack-horses of England, 
521—the Galloways of the Border 
counties, 522—the Horses of Conna- 
mara,in the west of Ireland; their 
Spanish origin; the neglect of the 
breed, and the means of improving 
it, 523. 

Hunter, the progressive steps in the 
formation of the characters of the 
modern, 588—distinction between the 
characters and form of the Race- 
horse and of the Hunter, 7b.—the high 
estimation in which the English 
Hunter is held, and the great drain 


of the breeding mares to foreign - 


countries, 590—difference between 
_ the older system of hunting and that 
now pursued, and the effect of the 
increased speed of the modern chase 
upon the characters of the Horses 
employed, 591-5. 
Hyzna, natural history of the, 624. 


Thex, Alpine, 5. 
Caucasian, 8. 
Nubian, 8. 
Siberian, 8. 

Irish Breed of Cattle, Polled, 327—its 
external characters, probable origin, 
and the rapid diminution of its num- 
bers from crossing with the Short- 
horned breed, ib. 


Jackal, natural history of the, 650—his 


eminent susceptibility of domestica- 
tion, 635. 


Jahral Goat, 10. 
Jemlah Goat, 9. 


Kerry Breed of Cattle, 309—its exter- 


nal characters, excellence of its beef, 
and its power of subsisting on scanty 
food, #b.—peculiar adaptation of the 
Cows to the domestic dairy, and their 
great value, on this account, to the 
tenantry of Ireland, 310 — inatten- 
tion of the breeders to the preserva- 
tion of the purity of the stock, ¢b.— 
origin of the Dexter variety of this 
breed, 2b.—result of erossing the 
breed with the larger races, and the 
importance of maintaining its purity, 
311. 


Kerry Breed of Sheep, 75—its external - 


characters, the quality of its wool, its 
slow fattening properties, and the ex- 
cellence of its mutton, 76—notices of 
the ancient forests of Ireland, and the 
change which the country has under- 
gone by their destruction, 77—rude- 
ness of the sheep-hysbandry of the 
bogs and mountains, 78—remarks on 
the defective relations between land- 
lord and tenant, 79. 


Leicester, New, Breed of Sheep, 190— 


its formation by Robert Bakewell of 
Dishley ; the principles and practice 
of breeding adopted by him, and the 
eminent success of his experiments, 
tb.—question as to the original of this 
breed, 193—its size, form, wool, and 
property of arriving at early matu- 
rity of muscle and fatness, 195— 
Bakewell’s system of letting rams on 
hire, and its effect in extending the 
influence and preserving the purity 
of the breed, 196—examination of his 
principles of breeding, 198—general 
diffusion of the New Leicester Breed, 
and its influence in improving the 
other Sheep of the country, 199— 
remarks on the objections urged 
against the extension of the breed, 
200. 


Lincoln, Old, Breed of Sheep, 169— 


distinction between the Short and 
Long woolled Sheep of England, and 
the arrangement of the latter into 
those inhabiting the inland plains, 
and those inhabiting the fens and al- 


I 
| 

| 
ai 
i] 
i 

| 


> 
oe 5 


762 INDEX. 


luvial country, 7b.—derivation of the 
Old Lincoln breed from the fens and 
marshes of Lincolnshire and the ad- 
joining districts, 170—the coarseness 
of its form, the weight and quality 
of its fleece, its slow fattening pro- 
perties, and the changes which it un- 
derwent by crossing with the New 
Leicester breed, 171—the Modern 
Lincoln Breed, and its properties, 174. 
Long-horned Breed of Cattle, 367—its 
naturalization for an unknown pe- 
riod in Ireland and the western 
counties of England; and the dis- 
tinction between it and the other 
races of the country, 368—external 
characters of the older breed, its 
slow fattening properties, and the 


adaptation of the females to the dairy, | 


369—improvement of the breed by 
Mr Webster of Canley, and after- 
wards by Robert Bakewell of Dish- 
ley, 371—the principles of breeding 
adopted by Bakewell in the forma- 
tion of his improved breed ; its high 
reputation, and extensive diffusion, 
372-6—description of the Dishley 
breed: its size, form, colour, and fa- 
culty of fattening, 376—defects of the 
breed: inferior quality of the beef ; 
tendency to the accumulation of fat 
on particular parts of the body ; and 
deficiency of the females in the power 
of yielding milk, ¢b.—decline of the 
reputation of the breed in conse- 
quence of its inferiority for the pur- 
pose of grazing, 377. 

Long-woolled, Older, Breeds of Sheep, 
180—the Old Teeswater breed, the 
Old Warwickshire breed, the breeds 
of the Western counties, and of De- 
vonshire and Somersetshire; and the 
important changes effected on them 
by admixture with the New Leices- 
ter breed, 180-3—the Long-woolled 
Sheep of Ireland; their ancient cha- 
racters, progressive improvement,and 


ductions, 7b.—the foreign invasions 
and civil convuisions of the country: 
its conquest by the Carthagenians, 
127—by the Romans, 128—by the 
Goths, 129—by the Moors, 130—its 
ultimate restoration to the Christians, 
the final expulsion of the Moors, and 
the progressive decline of arts and 
industry, 131-3—inquiry into the 
origin of the Merino breed of Sheep, 
133—its external characters, and the 
peculiar properties of its wool, 136— 
its slow fattening powers, and the 
inferiority of the ewes as nurses, 7. 
the stationary and migratory Sheep 
of Spain; and -the injurious system 
of management adopted with regard 
to the latter, 188—history of the na- 
turalization of the Merino breed in 
different countries : in Sweden, 141— 
in France, 142—in Saxony, 148—in 
Prussia, 7/.—in Austria, Germany, 
and other countries of Europe, 144— 
in England ; unfavourable results of 
the experiments; and objections to 
the cultivation of the breed, 145— 
extension of the breed to New Hol- 
land; its prodigious multiplication, 
the delicacy and softness of the fleece, 
and the great importance of its pro- 
duction in these colonies to the manu- 
facturing interests of Great Britain, 
150. 

Mexican Wolf, 661. 

Milk, chemical composition of, 267— 
use of it as food by the earliest people, 
together with its products, butter and 
cheese, 268—the milk of different 
species of animals: of the Domestic 
Cow, the Buffalo, and the Yak, 271— 
of the Camel, ib.—of the Goat, 272—. 
of the Ewe, 273—of the Rein-deer, 7b. 
—of the Mare, 274— of the Ass, 275— 
methods of separating it into its seve- 
ral products, viz., Skimmilk, 275— 
Butter and Buttermilk, 276—Cheese, 
4b.—Whey, 277. 


present condition, 183. Mongolian Family of Mankind, xl. 

: Mouflon d’ Afrique, 25. 

Malay or Polynesian Family of Man- | Mule, his value as a beast of burden in 
kind, xli. rocky countries, 444—his employment 

Maltese breed of Swine, 433. from the earliest times in rural la- 

Mastiff, 723. bours and otherwise, 445—the breeds 

Merino Breed of Sheep, 126—the cli- of Spain, ¢b.—expediency of extend- 
mate of Spain, and the great diver- ing his cultivation in the British Is- 
sity of its surface and natural pro- lands, 446. 


ai 


INDEX. 


Musk Ox of North America, natural his- 
tory of the, 214. 

Musmon of the Caucasus, 25—of Nepaul, 
26. 


Neapolitan Breed of Swine, 483—re- 
sult of crossing it with the Swine of 
England, ib. 

Negro Family of Mankind, xli. 

Newfoundland Dog, 711. 

Norfolk, Old, Breed of Sheep, 114—its 
derivation from the high lands of 
Norfolk, Suffolk, and Cambridge, 7b. 
—its external characters, the quality 
of its wool, and its affinity with the 
Black-faced Heath breed, 7b., 115 — 
the excellence of its mutton, 116—the 
system of crossing with the Leicester 
and South Down breeds for the pur- 
pose of obtaining lambs superior to 
the native stock, and the effect of this 
system in diminishing the number of 
the pure breed, 7b.—its useful proper- 
ties and defects, 117. 

Nubian or Abyssinian Ibex, 8. 


Orkney Islands, Cattle of the, 299 — 
their intermixture in blood with the 
Cattle of the Northern Highlands, id, 

Ox, form of the, xcix—the characters 
indicative of the fattening proper- 
ty, cii—early domestication and his- 
tory of the, 242—its habitudes and 
instincts, 45-9—its multiplication in 
the state of liberty in the plains of 
South America, and the characters 
and habits of the emancipated herds, 
251—its size and form, as influenced 
by climate, the supplies of food, and 
domestication, 264—diversity of the 
races naturalized in the British 
Islands, 265. 


Papuan or New Guinea Hog, 428. 

Pecearies of America, Collared and 
White-lipped, 399. : 

Pembroke Breed of Cattle, 304—iden- 
tity of its characters with those of 
the White Forest Breed ; its colour, 
size, and form; the excellence of its 
flesh, and adaptation of the females 
to the dairy, ib.—error of intermixing 
it with other breeds, 305—aflinity 
of the other Mountain Breeds of 
Wales with it, i.—the Anglesea 
Breed ; allied in its essential charac- 


763 


ters to the Pembroke, but of larger 
size and coarser form, 306—the mixed 
descent of the other cattle of Wales, 
307—the means of improving the cat- 
tle-husbandry of the country, 1. 

Penistone Breed of Sheep, 118—its ex- 
ternal characters, quality of its wool, 
and excellence of its mutton, ib.—its 
affinity with the Black-faced Heath 
Breed, éb.—the general inferiority of 
the breed, and the adaptation of the 
Cheviot Breed to the district occupied 
by it, 119. 

Pointer, 743. 

Portland, Isle of, Sheep of the, 125— 
their small size, the quality of their 
wool, and their delicate mutton, 7. 

Prairie Dogs of North America, 659. 


Quagga, Common, 449—Striped, 450. 


Race-courses of the British Islands, 588 
—Newmarket, 7b— Epsom, 540—As- 
cot, Goodwood, and York, 542—Don- 
caster, &c., 543—the Curragh of Kil- 
dare, 544—the practice of racing with 
half-bred horses, and objections to it, 
tb.—inferiority of the Arabs and 
other Oriental Horses for the Turf, 
546—regulations relative to the ba- 
lancing of the powers of the Horses 
by weights; and the former and pre- 
sent practice of the Turf regarding 
the weights to be carried, 548—private 
trials of the speed of Horses and the 
results of the practice, 550—the classes 
of persons connected with the Course: 
the Stable-boys; their duties, ha- 
bits,and the means of bettering their 
condition, 553—the Jockeys; their 
qualifications, modes of riding, and 
the system of wasting or training to 
which they are subjected, 556—exam- 
ples of this class in the case of Buckle, 
Chifney the elder and younger, Ro- 
binson and others, 559—the Training- 
grooms, and public establishments 
for training, 562—the Owners of 
Horses, and influential supporters of 
the Turf: the Duke of Cumberland, 
Mr O’Keily, the Earls of Grosvenor 
and Derby, &c., 563—the Duke of 
Queensberry, 565—the Prince of 
Wales,566—Earl Fitzwilliam, Charles 
James Fox, Sir Henry Vane Tem- 
pest, &c., 568—the other classes of 


764 INDEX. 


persons who support the Turf for the 
purposes of amusement and gambling, 
569—remarks on the institution of 
the Course as a system of Public 
Games, 570—and on the fraudulent 
practices which have been introduced 
into it, as the withdrawing of horses, 
the running to lose, deceptive trials, 
the getting up of favourites, the 
betting by jockeys and trainers, 573 
—continued exemplification of these 
abuses in the proceedings of the 
modern Turf, and the propriety of 
legislative interference in order to 
curb them, 578—remarks on the in- 
jurious effects of the present system 
of Short races, and running the Colts 
before they have acquired the neces- 
sary maturity of bone and muscle, 
584. 

Race-horse, the progressive steps in the 
formation of the characters of the 
modern, 512—notices of the principal 
Horses which have contributed to 
that end, and their distinction on the 
Turf: the White and Byerly Turks, 
Herod, the Darley Arabian, the Fly- 
ing Childers, Eclipse, the Godolphin 
Barb, Lath, and Matchem, 527—re- 
cording of the pedigrees of the Horses 
of the Turf, and its importance in 
preserving the purity of descent, 531 
—the conformation and colour of the 
Race-horse, 533—his rearing, educa- 
tion, and training, 535. 

Radnor Breed of Sheep, 66—its affinity 
with the Breed of the Higher Welsh 
Mountains, ¢d. 

Rocky-Mountain Sheep, 24. 

Romney Marsh Breed of Sheep, 174— 
description of the alluvial district of 
the Romney Marsh, 175—characters 
of the ancient race of Sheep reared 
upon it, 176—the changes effected on 
them by intermixture with the New 
Leicester Breed, 177—examination 
of the arguments used against the 
introduction of the New Leicester 
Breed, 178. 

Ryeland Breed of Sheep, 155— account 
of the district of the Ryelands, and 
origin of the breed, 1b.—fineness of 
its wool, and the system formerly 
practised in order to preserve and 
increase it, 156—its small size, good 


form, and the excellence of its mut- 


ton, 157—failure of the experiments 
in crossing it with the Spanish Meri- 
nos, 158—progressive diminution in 
its numbers, in consequence of the 
introduction of more valuable breeds, 
159—-notices of the minor varieties of 
this breed, 159. 


Scotland, ancient Soft-woolled Sheep 


of, 63 — their external characters, 
wild habits, and hardy properties, ib. 


Setter, 744. 
Sheep, form of the, evii—the characters 


indicative of the property of fatten- 
ing readily, and of the faculty of pro- 
ducing wool, cix—its external cha- 
racters, as distinguished from those 
of the Goat, 22—the Wild species: 
the Argali of Asia, 23—the Rocky- 
Mountain Sheep, 24—the Bearded 
Argali, ib.—the Musmon of the Cau- 
casus, 25—the Moufion d’Afrique, i. _ 
the Musmon of Nepaul, 26—question 
of the origin of the domesticated 
races, 2/—their ancient subjugation ; 
and early acquaintance of the people 
of the East with the arts of weaving 
and dyeing their wool, 28—influence 
of domestication upon its characters 
and habits, 30—variety in the proper- 
ties and colour of its wool, 32—diver- 
sities of the domesticated races, 33— 
the flat-tailed sheep of Asia, the short- 
tailed Sheep of Northern Asia,and the 
large-tailed Syrian or Turkish Sheep, 
ib,—the fat-rumped Sheep of the 
countries of the Caspian, 34 — the 
Sheep of Persia, Tartary, China, and 
the Eastern Islands,35—the Sheep of 
Hindostan, 36—the Sheep of North- 
ern Africa, of the countries of the Red 
Sea, and of Western and Southern 
Africa, ib—the Sheep of ancient 
Europe, and inquiry as to the time 
and mode of their introduction into it, 
37—the short-tailed Sheep of North- 
ern Europe, and the polycerate Sheep 
of Iceland, 38—the Sheep of Euro- 
pean Turkey, Greece, and the Islands 
of the Archipelago, 39—of the coun- 
tries of the Danube, ib.—of ancient 
and modern Italy, and of Sicily. i. 
—of Spain, 40 — of the British 
Islands, 41. , 


Shepherd’s Dog, 708. 
Short-horned Breed of Cattle, 379— 


INDEX. 


difference between the characters of 
the Long-horned Cattle of Ireland and 
the western counties of England, and 
those of the eastern and drier coun- 
ties towards the German Ocean, 7d. 
—resemblance of the latter to the 
Cattle of Holland, Holstein, and Jut- 
land, 6.—importation of Cattle from 
Holland and the countries of the 
Elbe, and their intermixture with the 
native races, 380—the Cattle of the 
district of the Tees; their former 
characters, and progressive changes, 
and their ultimate improvement by 
Charles and Robert Colling, in the 
county of Durham, 7b.—principles of 
breeding adopted by Charles Colling ; 
the information possessed regarding 
his early practice; the means by 
which he perfected his stock, and the 
reputation which it acquired, 381-4 
—sale and dispersion of his stock in 
1810, and of Robert Colling’s stock. 
in 1818, 384 — description of the 
modern Teeswater or Durham Breed: 
its size, colour, and form; its faculty 
of arriving at early maturity and at 
a greater weight than any other race 
of cattle of the same age, 387—its 
extensive diffusion, and great econo- 
mical importance, 388—principles to 
be observed in the further cultiva- 
tion of the breed, 389, 
Siamese Breed of Swine, 425—its wide 
diffusion in the countries of Eastern 

- Asia, ib.—its form and properties, ib. 
—the Chinese variety of this breed, 
its introduction into England, and 
the beneficial results of intermixing 
it with the native races, 426. 

Siberian Ibex, 8. 

Sledge-Dogs of the Arctic Regions, 700. 

Somersetshire Sheeted Breed of Cattle, 
350—its adaptation to the dairy; ex- 
cellence of its beef; diminution of its 
numbers, 7b. 

South Down Breed of Sheep, 160 - — 
notices of the Short-woolled Sheep of 
England, and the diversities produced 
by food, climate, and place, iJ.—ac- 
count of the South Down Hills of Sus- 
Sex, their adaptation to the rearing 


of a race of fine Sheep, and the cha- 


racters of the original breed occupy- 
ing them, 162 — description of the | 


modern South Down breed: its ex- | 


765 


ternal form, excellent mutton, and 
power of arriving at early maturity, 
163—progressive improvement of the 
breed by Mr Ellman and others, 
164—its wide diffusion, chiefly in the 
dry and calcareous parts of England, 
166—w eight and quality of its wool, 
167. 


South Sea Islands, Hog of the, 428. 


Spaniel, 744, 

Stag-Hound, 739. 

St Bernard, Great Dog of, 732. 

Suffolk Breed of Cattle, Polled, 322— 
its size, form, and colour, 15.—its cul- 
tivation from an early period in the 
county of Suffolk, 323—its admirable 
adaptation to the dairy, but defec- 
tive fattening properties, 324 —the 
attempts to improve it for the pur- 
pose of rendering it suited to grazing 
as well as the dairy, 326. 

Suffolk Punch Breed of Horses, 618— 
its colour, form, and powers of 
draught, 619—system of crossing pur- 
sued with the larger Horses of York- 
shire and Durham, 620— its supe- 
riority to the English Black Horse 
for activity and endurance, and the 
demand which has arisen for it for 
the purposes of the dray and waggon, 
ab. 

Sussex Breed of Cattle, 351—account of 
the Wealden of Sussex, 2b. —affinity 
of this breed to the North Devon; 
its larger size and coarser form, 353 
~—itsexternal characters, and deficient 
milking properties, 2b.—its employ- 
ment for draught, and adaptation to 
that service, ¢6.—comparison between 
the Horse and Ox for the purposes of 

. farm-labour, 354. 


Terrier, 747. 


Uri or Wild Oxen of the ancient Fo- 
rests of Europe, 232—their former 
abundance in the forests surrounding 
London, and in the great central fo- 
rests of Scotland, 234—their preser- 
vation in the parks of individuals in 
Great Britain; and their characters 
and habits in the unreclaimed State, 

' 235-9—ancient notices of those ex- 
isting in Wales, and their preserva- 
tion in the county of Pembroke in 
the state of domestication, 239—their 


766 INDEX. 


existence in Italy, Sweden, and the 
Pyrenees, 240 — examination of the 

. objections urged against their iden- 
tity with the Mountain Cattle of Scot- 
land and Wales, 241. 


Wales, Soft-woolled Sheep of, 67—their 
external characters, wild habits, and 
the excellence of their mutton, 68— 
economical value of their wool, 69— 
affinity of the Anglesea and Old Rad- 
nor breeds with them, ib,—the bad 
treatment of the Sheep, and the 
means of improving them, 70. 

Wart-bearing Hogs of Africa, 398. 

Water-Spaniel, English, 746. 

Welsh Mountains, Higher, Sheep of the, 
64—their external characters, the 
nature of their fleece, and their wild 
habits, 65—reason why they remain 
distinct from the other Sheep of 
Wales, ib—the change produced in 
their characters when naturalized in 
a lower range of pastures, 66 —affinity 
of the Radnor and other Sheep of 
Wales with them, 2b.—the means of 
improving them, 67. 

West Highland Breed of Cattle, 300— 
general characters of the Cattle oc- 
cupying the Highlands of Scotland ; 
and their identity with the Uri of 


the ancient forests, 76.—the charac- . 


ters indicative of the faculty of ar- 
riving at early maturity, and, at the 
same time, of adaptation to a country 
of mountains; and the existence of 
these characters in the West High- 
Jand Breed, 302—deficiency of the 
Cows in the power of yielding milk, 
303—importance of maintaining the 
purity of the breed, 304. 

Wicklow Mountains, Sheep of the, 71 
—adaptation of the soil and climate 
of Ireland to the rearing of Sheep, 
ib.—the breeds of the country di- 
vided ‘into those of the mountains 
and those of the plains, 72—descrip- 
tion of the Breed of the Wicklow 
Mountains: its affinity with the Soft- 
woolled Sheep of Wales; its exter- 
nal characters, the excellence of its 
mutton, and its wild habits, 73— 
adaptation of the ewes to the rearing 
of lambs for winter consumption, 74 
—continual diminution in the num- 


ber of the pure breed in consequence 
of crossing, 7b. 


Wild or White Forest Breed of Cattle, 


296—its identity with the Urus of the 
ancient Forests, 76.—its existence in 
the county of Pembroke, and in dif- 
parts of England, <b. 


Wiltshire, Old, Breed of Sheep, 120— 


its external characters, the fineness 
of its wool, and the quality of its mut- 
ton 7/.—near extinction of the breed 
in consequence of the preference 
given to the South Downs, 16.—no- 
tice of extinct breeds allied to it, 
322. 


Wolf, Common, 626—Black, 627— 


Dusky, 75.—natural history of the, 
627—his former abundance in the 
forests of Europe, and the gradual 
diminution of his numbers with the 
progress of settlement and cultiva- 
tion, 634—his susceptibility of do- 
mestication, 636—his power of pro- 
creating with the common Dogs, and 
producing a fruitful progeny, 640— 
examination of the arguments urged 
against his identity with certain of 
the domesticated’Dogs, 642—the Wolf 
of the. Eastern Islands, 645—the 
Mexican Wolf, 661. 


Wolf-dog, Irish, 722. 
Wool, variety in the properties and 


colour of, 32—how chiefly distin- 
guished from hair, 41—influence of 
domestication in developing the wool 
of the Sheep, 42—remarks on the 
shearing of it, method of sepa- 
rating the fine from the coarse wool 
in a fleece, 43—its eminent adapta- 
tion to the reception of colours by 
dyeing, ib.—its distinction into the 
Long and Short kinds, 7.—descrip- 
tion of the process of Combing, 44— 
of Carding, 45—of Felting, i4.—of 
Fulling, 46. 


Woollen Manufacture of Great Britain, 


injurious effects of the law of 1819 
upon the, 48—history and progres- 
sive increase of the, 50—its great im- 
portance as a branch of national in- 
dustry, 57. 


Yak of Tartary, natural history of the, 
215 — its economical value in the 
countries which it inhabits, 217. 


INDEX. 


York, Durham, and Northumberland, 
Horses of the counties of, 614. 


Zebra, natural history of the, 448. 

Zebu, African, 260—its domestication 
all over Africa, 262. 

Indian, 255—its domestication 
in the countries of the East, 256. 

Zetland and Orkney Islands, Sheep of 
the, 58—their external characters, and 
wild habits, 76.—economical value of 


767 — 


their wool, 60—rudeness of their 
general treatment, 7/.—the means of 
improving them, 62. 

Zetland Islands, Cattle of the, 296— 
their Norwegian origin, external cha- 
racters, and the precocity and milk- 
ing properties of the females, ib.— . 
their rude condition and careless 
treatment, 298—means to be employ- 
ed for improving them, 292. 


THE END. 


crichton actin aa 


PRINTED BY NEILL AND COMPANY: EDINBURGH. 


October 1845. 


A Catalogue of New Works and New Hditions, 


PRINTED FOR 


LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, & LONGMANS, 


AGRICULTURE AND RURAL 


AFFAIRS. Pages 
Bayldon On valuing Rents, &c. - 3 
Crocker’s Land-Surveying - - 7 
Davy’s Agricultural Chemistry - 7 
Greenwood’s (Col.) Tree-Lifter - 10 
Hannam on Waste Manures - - 11 


Johnson’s Farmer’s Encyclopedia 
Loudon’s Encyclop. of Agriculture 
= Self-Instruction for Far- 
mers, & - “ » 
(Mrs.) Lady’s Country 


ee 
Companion - 
Elements of Agriculture ~ 
Breeds of the Domesticated 
Animals of Great Britain - 
On Landed Property -. - 19 
On the DomesticatedAnimals 18 


ARTS, MANUFACTURES, 
AND ARCHITECTURE. 


Brande’s Dictionary of Science, &c. 
Budge’s Miner’s Guide - - - 
DeBurtin on theKnowledge ofPictures 7 
Gwilt’s Encyclop. of Architecture 11 
Haydon’s Lectures on Painting and 
Design - - - - - 
Holland’s Manufactures in Metal - 
Loudon’s Encycl. of Rural Architect, 
Porter’s Manufacture of Silk-  - 24 
“ 


_ Low’s 
“ 


a 
« 


5 
6 


Porcelain& Glass 24 
Reid (Dr.) On Ventilation -  - 25 
Steam Engine, by the Artisan Club 28 
Ure’s Dictionary of Arts, &c. “= 31 
« On Recent Improvements in 
Erte, &0. oot re or - Sh 
BIOGRAPHY. 
Aikin’s Life of Addison - - - 8 
Bell’s Lives of eminent British Poets 4 
Dover’s Life of the King of Prussia 8 
Dunham’s Lives of the Early Wri- 
ters of Great Britain - 8 
isl Lives of British Dramatists 8 
Forster’s Statesmen of the Com- 
monwealthof England 9 
“© (Rev.C.) Life of Bp.Jebb 9 
Gleig’s Lives of the most Eminent 
British MilitaryCommanders - 10 
Grant’s (Mrs.) Memoir and Corre- 
spondence - - - - - 10 
James’s Life of the Black Prince - 16 
= Lives of the most Eminent 
Foreign Statesmen - 16 
Leslie’s Life of Constable - - li 
Mackintosh’s Life of Sir T. More 19 
Maunder’s Biographical Treasury- 21 
Roberts’s Duke of Monmouth. - 2 
Roscoe’s Lives of British Lawyers- 25 
Russell’s Correspondence of the 
Fourth Duke of Bedford - - & 
Shelley’s Lives of Literary Men of 
Italy, Spain, ani Portugal 27 


A Lives of French Writers - 27 
Southey’s Lives of the Admirals - 28 
Waterton’s Autobiography & Essays 31 


BOOKS OF GENERAL 
UTILITY. 
Acton’s Cookery 
Black’s Treatise on Brewin 
Collegian’s Guide (The) ~ 
Donovan’s Domestic Economy 
Hand-book of Taste - = - 
Hints on Etiquette - 
Hudson’s Parent’s Hand-book 
oe Executor’s Guide - 


“ On Making Wills - 14 
Loudon’s Self-Instruction - Fy 
Maunder’s Treasury of Knowledge 21 

be Biographical Treasury - 21 

me Scientific and Literary 
Treasury - - - 21 
kt Treasury of History - -° 21 
* Universal Class-Book - 21 
Parkes’s Domestic Duties _ - ~ 23 
Pycroft’s (Rey. J.) English Reading 24 
Riddle’s Latin-Eng. ‘Dictionaries 25 
Short Whist - - - - - 27 
Thomson’s Domestic Management 
of the Sick Room - 30 
Thomson’s Interest Tables - - 30 
Tomlins’s Law Dictionary - - 930 


CLASSIFIED INDEX. 


Pages 
Webster’s Encyclopedia of Domes- 
tic Economy - - - : 


BOTANY AND GARDENING. 


Abercrombie’s Practical Gardener 

a and Main’sGardener’s 

Companion - - 

Callcott’s Scripture Herbal - - 
Conversations on Botany - - 

Drummond’s First Steps to Botany 8 

Glendinning On the Culture of the 


Pine Spee pay 10 
Greenwood’s (Col.) Tree-Lifter - 10 
Henslow’s Botany - - -, - 12 
Hoare On Cultivation of the Vine - 12 

« On the Management of the 

Roots of Vines - - - 12 
Hooker’s British Flora - - - 12 
«© and Taylor’s Muscologia 

Britannica - - - 12 

Jackson’s Pictorial Flora - - 15 

ees Gramina Britannica - 15 

Lindley’s Theory of Horticulture - 17 
<i) Guide to the Orchard and 


Kitchen Garden - - 


A Introduction to Botany - 


Lid Flora Medica - - - 17 
< Synopsis of British Flora 17 
Loudon’s Hortus Britannicus a) ibs) 
ss «“ Tignosis Londinensis 18 

Self-Instruction for Gar- 
deners, &c. - te ary 
Ld Encyclop.of Trees &Shrubs18 
> B Gardening 17 
al pas Plants - 18 

tg Suburban Gardener and 
Villa Companion - 18 
Repton’s Landscape Gardening - 25 
Rivers’s Rose Amateur’s Guide - 25 
Roberts On the Vine - = - = 25 
Rogers’s Vegetable Cultivator - 25 
Schleiden’s Scientific Botany - 26 
Smith’s Introduction to Botany - 27 
«English Flora -_  -_ - 27 
«© Compendium of Eng. Flora 27 

CHRONOLOGY. 


Blair’s Chronological Tables - 4 
Calendar (Illuminated) & Diary, 1846 14 
Nicolas’s Chronology of History - 22 
Riddle’s Ecclesiastical Chronology 25 
Tate’s Horatius Restitutus - 29 


COMMERCE AND MERCAN- 
TILE AFFAIRS. 


Kane’s ae Industrial Resources 


of Ireland - - 15 
Lorimer’s Letters to a Young 
Master.Mariner - - - 17 


M‘Culloch’s Dictionary of Com- 

merce and Commer. Navigation - 
Steel’s Shipmaster’s Assistant - 
Thomson’s Interest Tables - - 


GEOGRAPHY & ATLASES. 
Butler’s Sketch of Ancient and 


19 
28 


Modern Geography - 5 

«  Atlasof Modern Geography 6 

a 2 Ancientdo.-  - 6& 
Cooley’s World ah a ae a OG 
De Strzelecki’s New South Wales - 8 


Forster’s Hist. Geography of Arabia 9 
Hall’s New General Atlas - - U 


Paternoster Row, London. 


RADI 


OPAL RAPID PPP IPO 


___ Pages 

Dahlmann’s English Revolution - | 7 

Dunham’s Hist. of Spain& Portugal 8 
- History of Europe dur- 

the Middle Ages - 8 


in 
# Hist. of the German Emp. 8 
‘ik History of Denmark, 
= Sweden, and Norway - 


History of Poiand ~ 
Dunlop’s History of Fiction - | - 
Fergus’s History of United States 9 
Grant’s (Mrs.) Memoir and Corre- 


spondence - - - ~ - 10 
Grattan’s History of Netherlands - 10 
Guicciardini’s Historical Maxims- 11 
Halsted’s Life of Richard IIT. erik 
Haydon’s Lectures on Painting and 

Design - = - - 12 
Horsley’s (Bp.) Biblical Criticism- 13 
Jeffrey’s (Lord) Contributions to 

The Edinburgh Review - - 15 
Keightley’s Outlines of History - 15 


Laing’s Kings of Norway | - - 16 


Lempriere’s Classical Dictionary - 17 
Macaulay’s Crit. and Hist. Essays 19 
Mackinnon’s History of Civilisation 19 
Mackintosh’s Miscellaneous Works 19 
History of England - 19 
M‘Culloch’s Historical, Geographi- 
cal, and Statistical Dictionary - 19 
Maunder’s Treasury of History - 21 
Milner’s Church History - - 21 
Moore’s History of Ireland - - 22 
Miiller’s Mythology - - . = 2% 
Nicolas’s Chronology of History, - 22 
Ranke’s History of the Reformation 24 
Roberts’s Duke of Monmouth - 25 
Rome, History of - - - - 25 
Russell’s Correspondence of the 
Fourth Duke of Bedford - - 4 
Scott’s History of Scotland - 26 
Sismondi’s Fall of Roman Empire 27 
: Italian Republics - 27 
Stebbing’s History ofthe Church- 28 
ee History of Reformation 28 
Ui Church History - - 28 
Switzerland, History of- - - 29 
oe Smith’s Works - - - 27 
Thirlwall’s History of Greece - 30 
Tooke’s History of Prices - - 30 
Turner’s History of England - 31 
Zumpt’s Latin Grammar - - 32 
JUVENILE BOOKS, 
INCLUDING MRS. MARCET’S WORKS. 
Boy’s own Book (The) - - = 
Hawes’s Tales of the North Ameri- 
can Indians - - - = a 
Howitt’s (Wm.) Jack of the Mill - 13 
us «¢ “ Boy’sCountry Book 14 


Howitt’s (Mary) Child’s Picture 


and Verse Book - 13 

Marcet’s Conversations — 
On the History of England - 20 
n Chemistry - - - 20 
m Natural Philosophy - - 20 
On Political Econom, - - 20 
On Vegetable Physiology - 20 
On Land and Water - - 20 
On Language -  - - - 2 
«¢ The Gameof Grammar - 20 
« Willy’s Grammar - = 20 
«  Lessonson Animals,&c. - 20 
Marryat’s Masterman Ready- - 21 
G Settlers in Canada = Ot 


ig Mission; or,ScenesinA frica20 
1 


M‘Culloch’s Geographical Dictionary 19 | Maunder’s Universal Class-Book - 
Malte-Brun’s Goomna - - 20 | Pycroft’s(Rev. J.) English Reading 24 
Murray’s Encyclop. of Geography- 22 | Summerly’s (Mrs. Felix) Mother’s 
Parrot’s Ascent of Mount Ararat 6 Primer - - = = EQS 
Uncle Peter’s Fair > ew 
HISTORY & CRITICISM. beans = 
Adair’s (Sir R.) Memoir of his Mis- _ MEDICINE. 
sionto Vienna - ~- Bull’s Hintsto Mothers- - - 5 
“ Negotiations for the Peace “ Management of Children - 95 
of the Dardanelles- _- Copland’s Dictionary of Medicine - 7 
Addison’s Hist. of Knights Templars 3 | Elliotson’s Human Physiology =~ 9 
Bell’s History of Russia - - 4 | Holland’s Medical Notes - - 2 
Blair’s Chron. and Histor. Tables - 4 | Lefevre’s (Sir George) Apology for 
Bloomfield’s Edition of Thucydides 4 the Nerves - atts - i 
“ Translation ofdo. - 4 | Marx and Willis (Drs.) on Disease 21 
Bunsen’s Egypt -  -.. - 5 | Pereira On Food and Diet - - 28 
Cooley’s History of Maritime and Reece’s Medical Guide - - ~- 24 
Inland Discover, - - = 6] Sandby On Mesmerism ee eO 
Crowe’s History of France - - 7! Wigan (Dr.) On Duality of the Mind 32 


amas 


MISCELLANEOUS. 
ee 


Black’s Treatise on Brewing - —- 
’ Bray’s Philosoph of EN cotseity: - 
Clavers’s Forest Life - . 
Collegian’s Guide (The) = = 
Colton’s Lacon - 
DeBurtinontheKnowledgeofPictures 
De Morgan On Probabilities - 
De Strzelecki’s New South Wales - 
Dunlop’s History of Fiction - - 
Good’s Book a aad pera aro 
raham’s Englis 
Guus Usteers from the Mountains 10 
Guest’s Mabinogion - 11 
Hand-book of Taste = 11 
Hobbes (Thos.), English Works of 12 
Holland’ S Progressive Education - 1] 
Howitt’s Rural Life of England - 13 
“ Visits to Remarkable Places 13 
$6 Student-Life of Germany - 13 
Rural and Domestic Life 
of Germany - 13 
Colonisation and Chris- 
tianity - - - 
German Experiences - 
Humphreys’ Illuminated Books - 
TWuminated Calendar - 
Jeftrey’s (Lord) Contributions to 
The Edinburgh Review - 
Lefevre’s (Sir George) Apolog y for 
the Nerves - - 
Life ofa Tra Mie.) Physician - 
Loudon’s (Mrs.) Badly 8 CURIE 
Companion 
Ea ee s Crit. and Hist. Essays 
Mackintosh’s Miscellaneous Works 
Marx and Willis D8) } on Decrease 
isease - 21 
Michelet’s Priests {Women ,&Families21 
Miiller’s Mytholog - 22 
Pycroft’s Course of Eng. Reading 24 
Sandby On Mesmerism - 26 
Sandford’s Church, School, & Parish 26 
Seaward’s Narrative of his Shipwreck26 
Smith’s (Rev. Sydney) Works - 27 
Summerly’s (Mrs. Helet) MSines s 
Primer - 
~Taylor’s Statesman. - - - 
Walker’s Chess Studies - - - 
Welsford on the English Language ¢ 
Wigan (Dr.) On Duality of the Mind § 
Willoughby’s (Lady) Diary - - 
Zumpt’s Latin Grammar - - 


NATURAL HISTORY. 
Catlow’s Popular Conchology - 
Doubleday’ 's Butterflies and Moths 
Gray’sFigures Sh MolascousAnimals 

«" “Mammalia - - 

“and Mitchell’s Ornithology - 
Kirby and Spence’s toi MmOLORy - 
Lee’s Taxidermy - 

«¢ Elements of N: Beare History 
Marcet’s Lessons on Animals, &c. 
Newell’s Zoology of the Eng. Poets 
Proceedings of Zoological Society - 
Stephens’s British Coleoptera - 8 
Swainson On Study of Natural Hist. 

Animals - - - 29 
Taxidermy - - = 
Quadrupeds - - - 
Birds - - 
Animals in Menageri ies - 
Fish, Amphibians, and 
Reptiles - 
Insects - - - - 
us Malacolog 2 
a Habits and Instincts of 
nimals - 29 
Transactions of Zoological Society 
Turton’s Shells oftheBritishIslands 31 
Waterton’s Essays on Natural Hist. 31 
NOVELS AND WORKS OF 
FICTION. 
Bray’s (Mrs.) Novels - - 
Doctor (The) - - 
Dunlop’s History of Fiction 
Howitt’s (Mary) Neighbours - 
«- Home = 
“f Hherieny: 8 Daughters 
sg age 
sad ie ea Family, &e. 
Marryat' 8 ag era Ready - 
Settlers in Canada - 20 
Mission; or,Scenes inAfrica21 
Willis’s (N. P.) Dashes at Life . 32 


ONE-VOL. CYCLOPAZDIAS 


AND DICTIONARIES. 
Blaine’s Eneyclop. of Rural Sports 
Brande’s Dictionary of Science, &e. 
Copiand’s Dictionary of Medicine - 
Gwilt’s Encyclop. Gf Arobiteatere - 
Johnson’s Farmer’s Encyclopzedia - 
Loudon’s Encyclopedias— 

Agriculture - - 
Rural BxCHieC ore. - 
Gardening - 
Plants - = bs 
Trees and Shrubs - = 1 
M‘Culloch’s Geographical Dictionary 19 
Dictionary of Commerce 19 


A GHS 4 tata Ga 


“ 


Pages 
Murray’s Encyclop, of Geography - “22 
Ure’s Dictionary of Arts, &c.- °- 81 
Webster & Parkes’s Dom. Economy 32 


POETRY AND THE DRAMA. 


Aikin’s (Dr.) British Poets  - 26 
ae s Family Shakespeare 27 
Chalenor’ s Walter Gray + 
Poetical Remains 

Costello’s Persian Rose crentiest 
Goldsmith’s Poems 
lagen by Tate  - - = 
L. E. L's Poetical Works - 
Macaulay’ s Lays of Ancient Rom 
Montgomery’ s Poetical Works 
Moore’s Poetical Works - 

= Lalla Rookh - 

bc Irish Melodies + 
Moral of Flowers - = 
Nisbet’s Poems - = 
Reynard the Fox - - 
Southey’ s Poetical Works 

British Poets - 

Spirit of the Woods - 
Thomson’s Seasons - 
Turner’s Richard III. - 
Watts’s (A. A.) Lyrics of the Heart 


POLITICAL ECONOMY 
AND STATISTICS. 
Kane’s (Dr.) Industrial Resources 
of Ireland 
M‘Culloch’s Geographical, Statisti- 
cal, and Historical Dictionary 
Dictionary of Commerce 

Literature of Political 

Economy - - = 20 

On Funding & Taxation 20 

Strong’s Greece as a Kingdom - 28 

Tooke’s History of Prices - - 30 


RELICIOUS RX MORALWORKS. 
Amy Herbert - - 
Bailey’s Essays on Pur: suitof Truth 3 
Bloomfield’s Greek Testament - 4 
be College and Schooldo, 4 
“ Greek & English Lexi- 
contoNewTestament 4 
Burder’s Oriental Customs - - 56 
5 
5 
6 
7 
8 


L on) ter F8 
1 we Alten 2 GR t Ot tee 6 pears 8 


Burns’ s Christian Philosophy - 
& Fragments 3 
Calleott’s Scripture Herbal - <= 
Cooper’s Sermons - - - - 
Dibdin’s Sunday Library - - 
Doddridge’s Family Expositor =" 8 
Englishman’ s Greek Concordance 
of the New Testament - 9 
Englishman’sHeb.&Chald, Concord. 8 
Fitzroy’ s(Lady) Scrip.Conversations 9 
Forster’s Hist. Geography of Arabia 9 
ae Life of Eashop Jebb - 
Gertrude 10 
Hook’s(Dr. )Lectures onPassion Week 12 
Horne’ s Introduction to Scriptures 12 
Abridgment of ditto - 13 
Horsley 8, (Bp. J pea Criticism- 12 
3 


Jebb’ 8 (Bp. ) Practical "Thooloay - 16 
Pastoral Instructions 15 
Correspond. with Knox 15 
Keon’s History of the Jesuits - 15 
Knox’s (Alexander) Remains - 16 
Laing’s Notes on pe penmiar 
Catholie Schism - 
Marriage Gift - - 0 
Michelet’sPriests Women, & Families21 
Milner’s Church History - - 21 
Parables (The) - - - - 23 
Parkes’s Domestic Duties - - 23 
Riddle’s Letters from a Godfather - 25 
Robinson’s Gresk@EnglishLexicon 
o the New Testament 
Sandford’s Parochielin - - - 
emale Improvement - 
¥ On Woman - 
Sermon on the Mount (The) - - 
Smith’s Female Disciple - 
Spalding’s Philosophy of Morals 
Stebbing’s Church History - 
Tate’s History of St.Paul - 
Tayler’sDoraMelder - 
“Margaret; ox, the Pearl 
« Sermons 
“Lady Coss 5, ‘Not of the 
orld 


“ “ 


Tomline’s Christian Theology - 
Turner’s Sacred History - 
Wardilaw’s Socinian Cdntanseray - 
Weil’s Bible, Koran, and Talmud 

Wilberforce’s View of Christianity 
Willoughby’s (Lady) Diary - - 


RURAL SPORTS, 
Blaine’s Dictionary of Sports - 
Hansard’s Fishing i in Wales - = 
Hawker’s instructions to Sportsmen 
Loudon’s (Mrs.) tady’ s Courrry 

Companion - - 
Stable Talk and Table Talk . - 
Thacker’s Courser’sRemembrancer 

a Coursing Rules 


THE SCIENCES IN GENERAL 
& MATHEMATICS. 


Bakewell’s Introduction to Beolosy ~ 
Balmain’s Lessons on Chemistry - 
Brande’s Dictionary of Science, 
Literature,and Art - - - 
Brewster’s Optics - = - = 
Conversations on Mineralogy 
De laBeche’sGeology of Comwall,&e. 
Donovan’s Chemistr 
Farey On the Steam Seitos- - 
Fosbroke On the Arts, Manners, ce, 
of the Greeks and Romans - - 
Greener On the Gun - - = 
Herschel’ 's Natural Philosophy - 
stronomy - = 
Holland’ 's Manufactures in Metal - 
Hunt’s Researches on Light - - 
Kane’s Elements of Chemistry - 
Kater and Lardner’s Mechanics - 
Lardner’s Cabinet Cyclopedia - 16 
= Hydrostatics & Pneumatics 16 
and Walker’s Electricity 16 
Arithmetic  - - - 16 
Geometry = 
Treatise on Heat 
Lectures on Polarised Light 
Lloyd On Light and Vision me AG 
Mackenzie's Physiolog gy of Vision - 19 
Mareet’s (Mrs.) Conversations on 
the Sciences, &c. - - 20 
Moseley’ s Practical Mechanics = 22 
ngineering&Architecture 22 
Geometry - 26 
Astronomy and Geodesy 26 
Owen’ s Lectures on Comp. Anatomy 23 
Parnell On Roads - - 23 
Pearson’s Practical Astronomy 
Peschel’s Elements of Physics 
Phillips’s Paleozoic Fossils 
Cornwall, &e. - 
Guide to Geology - 
Treatise on Geology - 24 
Introduct. to Mineralogy 24 
Portlock’s Report on the sais 
of Londonderry - 
Powell’s Natural Philosophy - - 24 
Quarterly Journal of the Seotogiont 
Society of London - 
Ritchie (Robert) On Railways - 25 
Roberts’s Dictionary of Geology - 25 
Sandhurst Coll. Mathemat. Course 26 
Scoresby’ 's Magnetical Investigations 26 
Scott’s Arithmetic and Algebra 6 
me Trigonometry ~ 
Thomson’s Algebra - 
Wilkinson’s Engines of War - 
TOPOGRAPHY AND 


CUIDE BOOKS. 
Addison’ s Hist.of the Temple Church 3 
3 


‘& 
4 
CmWMIMKH Wwn 


“ 

¢ 
“ 
“ 


Narrien’s 


“ec 
“ 
“c 


Guide to ditto - - 
Costello’ 8 (Miss) North Wales “er 
Ho wit” s(W.)German Experiences 12 
(R.) Australia Felix - 18 
TRANS, SACTIONS OF 
Transactions of OCIETIES._ 
British Architects - - 
Civil Engineers - « 
Entomological - 
Geological Seciety od London 
Linnean = = 
Zoological - 
Proceedings ofthe Zoological Society 2 
Quarterly Journal of the Geological 
Society of London - ahs 


TRAVELS. 

Cooley’s World Surveyed - 
Costello’s {Miss) North Wales 
De Custine’s’ Russia - 
De Strzelecki’s New South Wales - - 
Erman’s Travels through Siberia - 
Harris’s Highlands of thiopia - 
Howitt’s Wanderi ings of a Journey- 

man Taylor - - 
German Experiences 

we (R.) Australia Felix 
Laing’ 8 Notes of a Traveller - 
Residence in Norway 
Tour in Sweden = 
Life of a Travelling Physician 
Parrot’s Ascent of * Mount oo 
Paton’ Ss (A. A.) Servia - - 

“ Modern Syrians - 

Soatans s Observationson Sindh - 
Seaward’s Narrative  - - 


“ce 


“ 


Strong’s Greece as a Kingdom 
Von Orlich’s ‘i ravels in India 
beaches 12 MEDICINE 
AND AFFAIRS. 
Field’s Veterinary Records - - 
Morton’ 8 Veterinary 1} Medicine - 
Toxicological Chart 
Percivall’s Hippopathology - - 
natomy of the Horse - 
nett On Foot and Leg of Horse 
Stable Talk and Table Talk - - 
Turner On the Foot of the Horse 
White’s Veterinary Art- - « 
oe Cattle Medicine - 


CATALOGUE. 


ABERCROMBIE’S PRACTICAL GARDENER, 


_ And Improved System of Modern Horticulture, alphabetically arranged. 4th Edition, with 
Introductory Tréatise on Vegetable Physiology, and Plates, by W. Salisbury. 12mo. 6s. bds. 


ABERCROMBIE & MAIN.—THE PRACTICAL GARDENER’S 


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ACTON (ELIZA.)—MODERN COOKERY, 


In all its Branches, reduced to a System of Easy Practice. For the use of Private Families. 
In a Series of Receipts, all of which have been strictly tested, and are given with the most 
minute exactness. By En1za Acron. Dedicated to the Young Housekeepers of England. 
New Edition, greatly improved. Fcp. 8vo. illustrated by woodcuts, 7s. 6d. cloth. 


“ Miss Eliza Acton ma congratulate herself on: having composed a work of great utility, and one that is speedily 
finding its way to every ‘ resser’in the kingdom. Her Cookery-book is unquestionably the most valuable compendium 
of the art that has yet been puplehet: It strongly inculcates economical principles, and points out how good things 
may be concocted without that reckless extravagance which gocd cooks have been wont to imagine the best evidence 
they can give of skill in their profession.” —Mornin@ Post. 


ADAIR (SIR ROBERT). THE NEGOTIATIONS FOR THE 
- PEACE of the DARDANELLES, in 1808-9: with Dispatches and Official Documents. By 


the Right Honourable Sir RopertT ADAIR, G.C.B. Being a Sequel to the Memoir of his 
Mission to Vienna in 1806. 2 vols. 8vo. 28s. cloth. 


ADATR (SIR ROBERT).—AN HISTORICAL MEMOIR OF A 


MISSION to the COURT of VIENNA in 1806. By the Right Honourable Sir Roper? ADAIR, 
G.C.B. With a Selection from his Despatches, published by permission of the proper 
Authorities. syo. 18s. cloth. 


ADDISON.—THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS. 


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- ADDISON.—THE TEMPLE CHURCH IN LONDON: 


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-ATKIN.—THE LIFE OF JOSEPH ADDISON. 


Illustrated by many of his Letters and Private Papers never before published. By Lucy 
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AMY HERBERT. 


By a Lapy. Edited by the Rev. WILLIAM SEWELL, B.D. of Exeter College, Oxford. 
od Edition, 2 vols. fcp. 8vo. 9s. cloth. f 


BATLEY.— ESSAYS ON THE PURSUL OF TRUTH, 


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BAKEWELL.—AN INTRODUCTION TO GEOLOGY. 


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enlarged. 8vo. with numerous Plates and Woodcuts, 21s. cloth. 


BALMAIN.—LESSONS ON CHEMISTRY, 


For the use of Pupils in Schools, Junior Students in Universities, and Readers who wish to 
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Valuations; and Remarks on the Cultivation pursued on Soils in different Situations 
Adapted to the Use of Landlords, Land-Agents, Appraisers, Farmers, and Tenants. By_ 
J.S. BAYLDON. 6th Edition, corrected and revised. By JoHN DoNALDSON, Land-Steward, 


4 CATALOGUE OF NEW WORKS 


BEDFORD CORRESPONDENCE. — CORRESPONDENCE OF 


JOHN, FOURTH DUKE OF BEDFORD, selected from the Originals at Woburn Abbey: 
with Introductions by Lord Joun RussE.u. 
8vo. Vol. 1 (1742-48), 18s. cloth; Vol. 2 (1749-60), 15s. cloth. 


“ The second volume of this publication includes a correspondence haying relation to the period from the Peace of 
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Newcastle and Pitt, in 1757. The letters respecting the state of Ireland under the Viceroyalty of the Duke of Bedford, 
also here, are not a little interesting.” —Mornina HERALD. 

*,* The Third, and concluding yolume, with an Introduction by Lorp JoHN RussELL, 


is in the Press. 


BELL.—LIVES OF THE MOST EMINENT ENGLISH POETS. 


By Rosert BELL, Esq. 2 vols. fcp. 8vo. with Vignette Titles, 12s. cloth. 


BELL.—THE HISTORY OF RUSSIA, 


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BLACK.—A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON BREWING, 


Based on Chemical and Economical Principles: with Formule for Public Brewers, and 
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rected, with considerable Additions. The Additions revised by Professor Graham, of the 
London University. 8vo. 10s. 6d. cloth. 

“ T take occasion, in concluding this article, to refer my readers to the ‘ Practical Treatise on Brewing,’ by Mr. 
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BLAINE.—AN ENCYCLOPADIA OF RURAL SPORTS; 


Or, acomplete Account, Historical, Practical, and Descriptive, of Hunting, Shooting, Fishing, 
Racing, and other Field Sports and Athletic Amusements of the present day. By DELABERE 
P. BLAINE, Esq. Author of “ Outlines of the Veterinary Art,’ “Canine Pathology,” &c. &c. 
Illustrated by nearly 600 Engravings on Wood, by R. Branston, from Drawings by Alken, 
T. Landseer, Dickes, &c. 1 thick vol. 8vo. €2. 10s. cloth. 


BLATR’S CHRONOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL TABLES, 


From the Creation to the present time: with Additions and Corrections from the most authen- 
tic Writers ; including the Computation of St. Paul, as connecting the Period from the Exode 
to the Temple. Under the revision of Sir Henry Euutis, K.H., Principal Librarian of the 
British Museum. Imperial 8vo. 31s. 6d. half-bound morocco. 

“ The student of history, long accustomed to the Doctor’s ponderous and unmanageable folio, will rejoice over this 
handsome and handy volume. It is the revival and enlargement, in a far more compact and available form than the 
original, of the celebrated ‘ Chronological Tables’ of Dr. Blair. It comprises additions to our own time, and correc- 
tions from the most recent authorities. The outline of the plan is faithfully preserved and carried out, with every 
improvement of which it was susceptible.”—EXA MINER. 


BLOOMFIELD.—HISTORY OF THE PELOPONNESIAN WAR. 


By TuucypipEs. A New Recension of the Text, with a carefully amended Punctuation; and 
copious Notes, Critical, Philological, and Explanatory, almost entirely original, but partly 
selected and arranged from the best Expositors: accompanied with full Indexes, both of 
Greek Words and Phrases explained, and matters discussed in the Notes. The whole illus- 
trated by Maps and Plans, mostly taken from actual surveys. By the Rev.S.T. BLOOMFIELD, 
D.D. F.S.A. 2 vols. 8vo. 38s. cloth. 


BLOOMFIELD.—HISTORY OF THE PELOPONNESIAN WAR. 


By THucyDIDEs. Newly translated into English, and accompanied with very copious Notes, 
Philological and Explanatory, Historical and Geographical. By the Rey. S. T. BLOOMFIELD, 
D.D. F.S.A. 3 vols. 8vo. with Maps and Plates, 2. 5s. boards. 


BLOOMFIELD.—THE GREEK TESTAMENT: 


With copious English Notes, Critical, Philological, and Explanatory. By the Rey. 8. T. 
BLOOMFIELD, D.D. F.S.A. 5th Edition, improved. 2 vols. 8vo. with a Map of Palestine, 


2, cloth. 


BLOOMFIELD.—COLLEGE & SCHOOL GREEK TESTAMENT ; 


With English Notes. By the Rev. S.T. BLoomrireLp, D.D. 3d Edition, greatly enlarged, 
and very considerably improved, 12mo. 10s. 6d. cloth. 


BLOOMFIELD.—GREEK AND ENGLISH LEXICON TO THE 


NEW TESTAMENT: especially adapted to the use of Colleges, and the Higher Classes in 
Public Schools; but also intended as a convenient Manual for Biblical.Students in general. 
By Dr. BLooMFIELD. 2d Edition, greatly enlarged, and very considerably improved. 12mo. 
on wider paper, 10s. 6d. cloth. 


BOY’S OWN BOOK (THE) : 


A Complete Encyclopedia of all the Diversions, Athletic, Scientific, and Recreative, of Boy- 
hood and Youth. 20th Edition, square 12mo. with many Engravings on Wood, 6s. boards. 


elec 


PRINTED FOR LONGMAN, BROWN, AND CO. 5 


BRANDE.—A DICTIONARY OF SCIENCH LITERATURE, 


AND ART; comprising the History, Description, and Scientific Principles of every Branch 
of Human Knowledge; with the Derivation and Definition of all the Terms in General Use. 
Edited by W. T. BRANDE, F.R.S.L. & E.; assisted by JosnrH Cauvin, Esq. The various 
departments are by Gentlemen of eminence in each. 1 very thick vol. 8vo. illustrated by 
Wood Engravings, £3, cloth. 


" : 
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Revised and corrected by Mrs. Bray. In 10 vols. fep. 8vo. with Frontispieces and Vignettes 
from Designs and Sketches by the late Thomas Stothard, R.A.; C. A. Stothard, F.S.A.;5 
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Vol. 1, The White Hoods. With a new General Preface, a Portrait of the Author, after 
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Vol.2, De Foix ;—Vol. 3, The Protestant ;—Vol. 4, Fitz of Fitzford ;—Vol. 5, The Talba ;— 
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*,* To be continued monthly, and completed in 10 volumes ; each containing an entire Work, 
printed and embellished uniformly with the Standard Novels.’? 
iy 4 Hee ORDER OF pCa ea 
ov. 1—Trelawney. an. 1—Henry De Pomeroy. 
Dec. 1—Trials of the Heart. Feb. La ceed ee of Walreddom 


BRAY.—THE PHILOSOPHY OF NECESSITY ; 


Or, the Law of Consequences as applicable to Mental, Moral, and Social Science, By CHARLES 
Bray. 2 vols. 8vo. 15s. cloth. 


BREWSTER.—TREATISE ON OPTICS. 


By Sir Davip BREWSTER, LL.D. F.R.S., &c. New Edition. Fcp. 8vo. with Vignette Title, 
and 176 Woodcuts, 6s. cloth. 


BUDGE (J.)-THE PRACTICAL MINER’S GUIDE; 


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Vertical, Horizontal, and Traverse Dialling ; with their application to the Dial, Exercise of 
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BULL.—THE MATERNAL MANAGEMENT OF CHILDREN, 


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for the Management of their Health during Pregnancy and in the Lying In Room.” 2d Edi- 
tion, revised and enlarged. Fep. 8vo. 7s. cloth. 


BULL.—HINTS TO MOTHERS, 


For the Management of Health during the Period of Pregnancy and in the Lying-in Room; 
with an Exposure of Popular Errors in connection with those subjects. By THomas BULL, 
M.D. Physician Accoucheur to the Finsbury Midwifery Institution, &c. &c. 4th Edition, 
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BUNSEN.—AN INQUIRY INTO THE HISTORY, ARTS AND 


SCIENCES, LANGUAGE, WRITING, MYTHOLOGY, and CHRONOLOGY of ANCIENT 
EGYPT: with the peculiar position of that Nation in reference to the Universal History of 


Mankind. By the Chevalier C. C. J. Bunsen. Translated from the German, under the - 


‘Author’s superintendence, by C. H. Corrrett, Esq.; with additional matter, furnished by 
the Author. 2 vols. 8vo. with numerous Plates. [Preparing for publication. 


BURDER.—ORIENTAL CUSTOMS, 


Applied to the Illustration of the Sacred Scriptures. By SAMUEL BurDER, A.M. 3d Edit. 
with additions. Fcp. 8vo. 8s. 6d. cloth. 


BURNS.—THE PRINCIPLES OF CHRISTIAN PHILOSOPHY ; 


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BURNS.—CHRISTIAN FRAGMENTS ; 
Or, Remarks on the Nature, Precepts, and Comforts of Religion. By Joun Burns, M.D. 
F.R.S. Professor of Surgery in the University of Glasgow. Author of “The Principles of 
Christian Philosophy.” Fcp. 8vo. 5s. cloth. 


BUTLER.—SKETCH OF ANCIENT & MODERN GEOGRAPHY. 


By SAMUEL Butter, D.D. late Lord Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry; and formerly Head 
Master of Shrewsbury School. New Edition, revised by his Son. 8vo. 9s. boards. 

The present edition has been carefull revised by the author’s son, and such alterations introduced as continually 
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sulted where any doubt or difficulty seemed to require it; and some additional matter has been added, both in the 


ancient and modern part. 


= 


6 CATALOGUE OF NEW WORKS 


BUTLER.—ATLAS OF MODERN GEOGRAPHY. 


By the late Dr. BurLeRr. New Edition; consisting of Twenty-three coloured Maps, from a 


New Set of Plates; with an Index of all the Names of Places, referring to the Latitudes and 
Longitudes. 8vo. 12s. half-bound. 


BUTLER.—ATLAS OF ANCIENT GEOGRAPHY. 


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*,* The above two Atlases may be had, half-bound, in One Volume, 4to. price 24s. 


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CATLOW.—POPULAR CONCHOLOGY ; 


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and a complete Descriptive List of the Families and Genera, By Acnes Cartow. Fcp. 8vo. 
with 312 Woodcuts, 10s. 6d. cloth. 


CHALENOR.—POETICAL REMAINS OF MARY CHALENOR. 


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A Ballad, and other Poems. 2d Edition, including the Poetical Remains of Mary Chalenor. 
Fep. 8vo. 6s. cloth. “ 

* As the simple and spontaneous effusions of a mind apparently filled with feelings which render the fireside happy, 
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CLAVERS.—FOREST LIFE. 


By Mary Ciavers, an Actual Settler; Author of “A New Home, Who ’ll Follow??? 2 vols. 
fep. 8vo. 12s. cloth. 


COLLEGIAN’S GUIDE (THE); 


Or, Recollections of College Days, setting forth the Advantages and Temptations of a Univer- 
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and pupils, so may the latter learn much that is good for them to know, and which few could instil so effectually 
into the college youth as the author of this agreeable and useful Guide.”—Lirerary Gazerre. 


COLTON.—LACON ; OR, MANY THINGS IN FEW WORDS. 


By the Rev, C.C. Cotton. New Edition. 8vo. 12s. cloth. 


COOLEY.—THE WORLD SURVEYED IN THE NINETEENTH 


CENTURY; or, Recent Narratives of Scientific and Exploring Expeditions (chiefly under- 
taken by command of Foreign Governments). Collected, translated, and, where necessary, 
abridged, by W. D. Cootry, Esq. Author of the “ History of Maritime and Inland Discovery” 
in the Cabinet Cyclopedia, &c. 

The First Volume of the Series contains — 

THE ASCENT of MOUNT ARARAT, By Dr. Farepricu Parrot, Professor 
of Natural Philosophy in the University of Dorpat, Russian Imperial Councillor of 
State, &c. 8yo. witha Map by Arrowsmith, and Woodcuts, 14s. cloth. 

*,* Each volume will form, for the most part, a Work complete in itself, and the whole Series 
will present an accurate and luminous Picture of all the known portions of the Earth. 

The Second Work of the Series will be 


ERMAN’S TRAVELS through SIBERIA. eyo, [In the press. 


*,* On this traveller, the President of the Royal Geographical Society, in his Anniversary 
Address last year, bestowed the following encomium :—“ If we regard M. Adolph Erman as 
an astronomical geographer and explorer of distant lands, we must all admit that he stands in 
the very highest rank.” And in his Address delivered in May last, the President again made 
honourable mention of this traveller in the following terms :—‘In announcing to you with 
pleasure that the excellent work of your distinguished foreign member and medallist, Adolph 
Erman, is about to appear in English, I must not lose the opportunity of stating, that the 
last communication sent to us by M. Erman is one of very great importance.” 

“ The plan of this work we have before taken occasion to commend. It has, indeed, two great and obvious ad- 
vantages. In the first place, the narrative style must always be more interesting than the merel descriptive ; and, 
in the next, the express subject of any particular volume must receive more justice than it eoatid hope for in any 


treatise of general geography. In both respects it must form an admirable companion to such general treatises, 
which it is by no means intended to supersede, but to amplify, explain, and illustrate. ‘To such works, therefore, 
as Malte-Brun (improved by succeeding editors), the addition of this companion cannot fail to constitute a complete 
body of geography, so far as regards the countries and objects to be ‘surveyed.’ "—AvHEN ZUM. 


COOLEY.—THE HISTORY OF MARITIME AND INLAND 


‘DISCOVERY. By W. D. Cooury, Esq. 8 vols. fcp. 8vo. with Vignette Titles, 18s. cloth, 


PRINTED FOR LONGMAN, BROWN, AND CO. 7 


NN PRS 


CONVERSATIONS ON BOTANY. 


9th Edition, improved. Fcp. 8vo. 22 Plates, 7s. 6d. cloth; with the plates coloured, 12s. cloth. . 


CONVERSATIONS ON MINERALOGY. 


With Plates, engraved by Mr. and Mrs. Lowry, from Original Drawings. 3d Edition, en- — 
larged. 2vols. 12mo. 14s. cloth. 


COOPER (REV. E.)—SERMONS, 


Chiefly designed to elucidate some of the leading Doctrines of the Gospel. To whichis added, 

an Appendix, containing Sermons preached on several Public Occasions, and printed by 

desire. By the Rev. Edward Cooper, Rector of Hamstall-Ridware, and of Yoxail, in the 

ster 3 Sie ke ee] and late Fellow of All-Souls’ College, Oxford. 7th Edition. 2 vols. 
mo. 10s. boards. 


COOPER (REV. E.)—PRACTICAL AND FAMILIAR SERMONS, 


Designed for Parochial and Domestic Instruction. New Edition. 7 vols. 12mo. £1. 8s. boards. 
*,* Vols. 1 to 4, 5s. each; Vols. 5 to 7, 6s. each. 


COPLAND.—A DICTIONARY OF PRACTICAL MEDICINE; 


comprising General Pathology, the Nature and Treatment of Diseases, Morbid Structures, 
and the Disorders especially incidental to Climates, to Sex, and to the. different Epochs of 
Life, with numerous approved Formule of the Medicines recommended. By Jamrs CoPLAND, 
M.D., Consulting Physician to Queen Charlotte’s Lying-in Hospital ; Senior Physician to the 
Royal Infirmary for Children ; Member of the Royal College of Physicians, London; of the 
Medical and Chirurgical Societies of London and Berlin, &c. Vols. 1 and 2, 8vo. £3, cloth ; 
and Part 10, 4s. 6d. sewed. : 
*,* To be completed in One more Volume. 


COSTELLO (MISS).—THE ROSE GARDEN OF PERSIA. 


A Series of Translations from the Persian Poets. By Miss Loursa Sruarr CosrELto, Author 
of “Specimens of the Early Poetry ot France,” “A Summer amongst the Bocages and the 
- Vines,”’ &c. &c. Svo. with Borders printed in Gold and Colours. [In October. 


COSTELLO (MISS).—FALLS, LAKES, AND MOUNTAINS OF 


NORTH WALES; being a Pictorial Tour through the most interesting parts of the Country. 
By Loursa Stuart CosTELLo, Author of “A Summer among the Bocages and Vines,” “A 
Pilgrmage to Auvergne,” ‘ Bearn and the Pyrenees,” &c. Profusely illustrated with Views, 
from Original Sketches by D. H. M‘Kewan, engraved on wood, and lithographed, by T. and 
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CROCKER’S ELEMENTS OF LAND SURVEYING. 


Fifth Edition, corrected throughout, and considerably improved and modernized, by T. G. 
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Post 8vo. 12s. cloth. 

*,* The work throughout is entirely revised, and much new matter has been added ; there are new chapters, con- 
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&c. The chapter on Levelling also is new. 


CROWE.—THE HISTORY OF FRANCE, 


From the Earliest Period to the Abdication of Napoleon. By E. E. Crowe, Esq. 3 vols. fep. 
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DAHLMANN.—HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH REVOLUTION. 


By F. C. DAHLMANN, late Professor of History at the University of Gottingen. Translated 
from the German, by H. Evans Luoyp. 8vo. 10s. 6d. cloth, 

« Professor Dahlmann’s book is, in short, a rapid sketch of the whole of what we call the Modern History of Eng- 
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relation. Mr. Lloyd’s translation is very well executed.”’—EXAMINER. 


DAVY (SIR HUMPHRY).—ELEMENTS OF AGRICULTURAL 


CHEMISTRY, in a Course of Lectures. By Sir Humuury Davy. With Notes by Dr. Joun 
Davy. 6th Edition. 8vo. with 10 Plates, 15s. cloth. 


DE BURTIN.—A TREATISE ON THE KNOWLEDGE NECES- 


SARY to AMATEURS of PICTURES. Translated and Abridged from the French of M. 
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in the Class of Sciences, &c. By RopERT WHITE, Esq. 8vo. with four Lithographic En- 
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DE CUSTINE.—RUSSIA. 


By the Marauis De CusTINE- Translated from the French, 2d Edition. 3 vols, post 8vo. 
31s. 6d. cloth. 

<4 work which those who are desirous to know Russia as it really is, and not as it would fain impose itself on the 
world to be, would do well to consult. We promise our readers equal surprise and pleasure from the perusal of 
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cane aac eR SY PII SAE : 


8 CATALOGUE OF NEW WORKS 


RRA 


DE LA BECHE.—REPORT ON THE GEOLOGY OF CORN- 


WALL, DEVON, and WEST SOMERSET. By Henry T. DE 1a BrcHE, F.R.S. &c., 
Director of the Ordnance Geological Survey. Published by Order of the Lords Commissioners 
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DE STRZELECKTI (P. E.)\—THE PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION 


of NEW SOUTH WALES and VAN DIEMAN’S LAND; accompanied by a Geological Map 
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Lage with skill and scholarly art. M. De Strzelecki has passed twelve years in voyaging and exploring round 
he globe; and, out of these, five of continual labour, “during a tour of 7,000 miles on foot,’ were devoted to 
Tasmania. It seems needless to add to this, that we have hitherto had no description of the country comparable 
to his for care and authenticity. Its scientific plan’is judiciously preserved throughout the work; but we have, now 
and then, at the foot of the page, very teresting notes of personal observation or adventure, extracted from 
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DOCTOR (THE), &e. 


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DODDRIDGE.—THE FAMILY EXPOSITOR; 


Or, a Paraphrase and Version of the New Testament: with Critical Notes, and a Practical 
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DONOVAN.—A TREATISE ON DOMESTIC ECONOMY. 


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DOUBLEDAY’S BUTTERFLIES.—THE GENERA OF DIUR- 


NAL LEPIDOPTERA ; comprising their Generic Characters—a Notice of the Habits and 
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DOVER.—LIFE OF FREDERICK II. KING OF PRUSSIA. 


By Lorp Dover. 2d Edition. 2 vols. 8vo. with Portrait, 28s. boards. 


DRUMMOND.—FIRST STEPS TO BOTANY, 


Intended as popular Illustrations of the Science, leading to its study as a branch of general 
education. By J.L. DRumMonp, M.D. 4th Edit. 12mo. with numerous Woodcuts, 9s. bds. 


DUNHAM.—THE HISTORY OF THE GERMANIC EMPIRE. 


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DUNLOP JOHN).—THE HISTORY OF FICTION: 


Being a Critical Account of the most celebrated Prose Works of Fiction, from the earliest 
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ENGLISHMAN’S GREEK CONCORDANCE OF THE NEW 


TESTAMENT: being an Attempt at a Verbal Connexion between the Greek and the English 

Texts; including a Concordance to the Proper Names, with Indexes, Greek-English and 

FS ape ag Edition, carefully revised, with a new Index, Greek and English. Royal 
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ENGLISHMAN’S HEBREW AND CHALDEE CONCORDANCE 


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« The labour bestowed upon this important work has seldom, we should suppose, been equalled ; and we have the 


fullest conviction, from the merely cursory examination we are able to ee to such a stupendous task, that the result 
t! 


justifies all the labour, time, and money expended upon it. Indeed, the whole book bears the most palpable evi- 


‘dence of honest carefulness and unwearied diligence (the points of prime worth in a Concordance) ; and wherever 
we have dipped into its pages (about 1800), we have, in every case, had our opinion of its neatness, accuracy, and 
lucid order, confirmed and increased.” —LITERARY GAZETTE. 


FAREY.—A TREATISE ON THE STEAM ENGINE, 


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FERGUS.—HISTORY OF UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 


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FIELD.— POSTHUMOUS EXTRACTS FROM THE 


VETERINARY RECORDS OF THE LATE JOHN FIELD. Edited by his Brother, 
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FORSTER.—THE STATESMEN OF THE COMMONWEALTH 


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FORSTER (REV. 0.)—THE HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY OF 


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Hamyaritic Inscriptions recently discovered in Hadramaut. By the Rev. CHARLES ForsTER, 
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FORSTER (REV. C.)—THE LIFE OF JOHN JEBB, D.D. F.RS., 


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c 


10 CATALOGUE OF NEW WORKS 


I 


GERTRUDE. 


A Tale. By the Author of “ Amy Herbert.” Edited by the Rev. Winut1am SEWELL, B.D. 
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writer and warrants us in cordially recommending her ‘ Gertrude’ as pleasant and profitable reading.” —ATHEN ZUM, 


GLEIG.—LIVES OF MOST EMINENT BRITISH MILITARY 


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GLENDINNING.—PRACTICAL HINTS ON THE CULTURE 


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GOOD.—THE BOOK OF NATURE. 


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GRAHAM.—ENGLISH; OR, THE ART OF COMPOSITION 


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GRANT (MRS.)—LETTERS FROM THE MOUNTAINS. 


Being the Correspondence with her Friends, between the years 1773 and 1803. By Mrs Grant, 
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GRANT (MRS. OF LAGGAN)—MEMOIR AND CORRE- 


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GRATTAN.—THE HISTORY OF THE NETHERLANDS, 


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GRAY.—FIGURES OF MOLLUSCOUS ANIMALS, 


Selected from various Authors. Etched for the Use of Students. By Maria EMMA Gray. 
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GRAY (J. E.)—THE GENERA OF MAMMALIA; 


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GRAY AND MITCHELL’S ORNITHOLOGY.—THE GENERA 


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*,* The work will not exceed Fifty Monthly Parts. [No. 18 was published Oct. Ist. 


GREENER.—THE GUN; 


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GUEST.—THE MABINOGION, 


From the Llyfr Coch o Hergest, or Red Book of Hergest, and other ancient Welsh MSS.: 
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Part 4. The Romance of Kilhwch and Olwen. 

Part 5. The Dream of Rhonabwy, and the Tale of Pwyll Prince of Dyved. 

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HAND-BOOK OF TASTE; 
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HANSARD.—TROUT AND SALMON FISHING IN WALES. 


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HARRIS._THE HIGHLANDS OF ATHIOPIA ; 


Being the Accout of Eighteen Months’ Residence of a British Embassy to the Christian Court 
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HAWES.—TALES OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS, 


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HENSLOW.—THE PRINCIPLES OF DESCRIPTIVE AND 


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HINTS ON ETIQUETTE AND THE USAGES OF SOCIETY: 


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HOARE.—A DESCRIPTIVE ACCOUNT OF A NEW METHOD 


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HOARE.—A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON THE CULTIVATION 


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HOBBES.—ENGLISH WORKS OF THOMAS HOBBES, 


Of Malmesbury ; now first collected by Sir WiLL1AM MoLeswortu, Bart. 


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HOLLAND.—PROGRESSIVE EDUCATION ; 


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HOLLAND.—A TREATISE ON THE MANUFACTURES IN 


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HOLLAND.—MEDICAL NOTES AND REFLECTIONS. 


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HOOK (DR. W. F.)—THE LAST DAYS OF OUR LORD’S 


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HOOKER.—THE BRITISH FLORA, 


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Vol. 2, in Two Parts, comprising the Cryptogamia and Fungi, completing the British Flora, and 
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HOOKER AND TAYLOR.—MUSCOLOGIA BRITANNICA. 


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HORNE (THE REV. T. H.)—AN INTRODUCTION TO THE 


CRITICAL STUDY and KNOWLEDGE of the HOLY SCRIPTURES. By THomAs 
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of St. Edmund the King and Martyr, and St. Nicholas Acons, Lombard Street ; Prebendary 
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HORSLEY (BISHOP).—BIBLICAL CRITICISM 
On the first Fourteen Historical Books of the Old Testament; and on the first Nine Prophetical 
Books. By SAMUEL HorsLEy, LL.D. F.R.S. F.S.A. Lord Bishop of St. Asaph. 2d Edition, 
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By the same Author, : 
THE BOOK of PSALMS; translated from the Hebrew: with Notes, explanatory and critical. 


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HOWITT (MARY).—THE CHILD’S PICTURE AND VERSE 


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HOWITT (MARY).—THE H—— FAMILY: TRALINNAN ; 


AXEL and ANNA; and other Tales. 


By FreprikA BREMER. 


Translated by Mary 


Howirr. 2 vols. post 8vo. with Portrait of the Author, 21s. boards. 


Tue NEIGHBOURS. 
A Story of Every-day Life in Sweden. By 
FREDRIKA BREMER. Translated by MARry 
Howirr. 3d Edition, revised and corrected. 
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Tue Home. 
Or, Family Cares and Family Joys. By 
FREDRIKA Bremer. Translated by MAry 
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Tue Presipent’s DAUGHTERS. 

' Including Nina. By FreprikA BREMER- 
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HOWITT.—THE RURAL LIFE OF ENGLAND. 


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Life of the Aristocracy. 
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Life. 


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Habits, Amusements, and Condition of the 
People; in which are introduced Two New 
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HOWITT._THE LIFE AND 


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HOWITT.—THE RURAL AND SOCIAL LIFE OF GERMANY : 


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and during a Residence in that Country in the Years 1840-42. 
Author of “The Rural Life of England,” &c. 


By WILLIAM Howirr, 
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HOWITT.—WANDERINGS OF A JOURNEYMAN TAILOR, 
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CATALOGUE OF NEW WORKS 


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HOWITT (RICHARD). —IMPRESSIONS OF AUSTRALIA 


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HUDSON.—PLAIN DIRECTIONS FOR MAKING WILLS 


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HUDSON.—THE EXECUTOR’S GUIDE. 


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*,* These two works may be had in one volume, 7s. cloth. 


HUDSON.—THE PARENT’S HAND-BOOK; 


Or, Guide to the Choice of Professions, Employments, and Situations ; containing useful and 
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“A © Guide to the Choice of Professions, Employments, and Situations 3, containing useful and practical Informa- 
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his subjects, nothing at all approaching its usefulness, in the same way, can be found in our language. One wonders 
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HUMPHREYS.—THE ILLUMINATED BOOKS OF THE 
MIDDLE AGES.—A History of lluminated Books, from the IVth to the XVIIth Century. 
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In course of publication in Parts. Parts 1 and 2, each containing Three Plates, with 
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HUNT.—RESEARCHES ON LIGHT: 


An Examination of all the Phenomena connected with the Chemical and Molecular Changes 
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ILLUMINATED CALENDAR (THE).—THE ILLUMINATED . 


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seems iether 


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JACKSON.—PICTORIAL FLORA 5 
Or, British Botany delineated, in 1500 Lithographic Drawings of all the Species of Flowering 
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JAMES.—LIVES OF MOST EMINENT FOREIGN STATESMEN. 


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JAMES.—A HISTORY OF THE LIFE OF EDWARD THE 


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JEBB (BISHOP).—PRACTICAL THEOLOGY ; 


comprising Discourses on the Liturgy and Principles of the United Church of England and 
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By Joun Jess, D.D.F.R.S. Rishop of Limerick, Ardfert, and Aghadoe. 2d Edition. 2 vols. 


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JEBB (BISHOP) AND KNOX (ALEXANDER). — THIRTY 


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JEFFREY. — CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE EDINBURGH 


REVIEW. By Francis JEFFREY, now one of the Judges of the Court of Session in Scotland. 
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JOHNSON.—THE FARMER’S ENCYCLOPADIA, 


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KANE.—ELEMENTS OF CHEMISTRY ; 


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KANE.—THE INDUSTRIAL RESOURCES OF IRELAND. 


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KATER AND LARDNER.—A TREATISE ON MECHANICS. 
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KEIGHTLEY.—OUTLINES OF HISTORY, 
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KEON (M. G.J—A HISTORY OF THE JESUITS, 


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KIRBY & SPENCE.—AN INTRODUCTION TO ENTOMOLOGY ; 


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KNAPP.—GRAMINA BRITANNICA ; 


Or, Representations of the British Grasses : with Remarks and occasional Descriptions. By 


tudy of insects to that of their manners and economy, need not be 
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I. L. Knapp, Esq. F.LS. & AS. 2d Edition. 4to. with 118 Plates, beautifully coloured, — 


£3. 16s. boards. 


FS reo cnagy ma sveae ee ame 
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16 CATALOGUE OF NEW WORKS 


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KNOX (ALEXANDER).—REMAINS OF ALEXANDER KNOX, 
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Confidential Letters, with Private Papers, illustrative of the Writer’s Character. Sentiments, 
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LAING.—NOTES ON THE SCHISM FROM THE CHURCH OF 


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LAING.—NOTES OF A TRAVELLER, 


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LAING.—A TOUR IN SWEDEN, 


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LARDNER’S CABINET CYCLOPADIA; 


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LARDNER.—A TREATISE ON HEAT. 


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LARDNER.—A TREATISE ON GEOMETRY, 


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LECTURES ON POLARISED LIGHT, 


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L. E. L.—THE POETICAL WORKS OF LETITIA ELIZABETH 


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LEE.—TAXIDERMY ; 


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LEFEVRE (SIR G.)—AN APOLOGY FOR THE NERVES ; 


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LESLIE (C. R..—MEMOIRS OF THE LIFE OF JOHN CON- 


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LIFE OF A TRAVELLING PHYSICIAN, ap ee 


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LINDLEY.—INTRODUCTION TO BOTANY. 
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LINDLEY.—FLORA MEDICA; 
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LINDLEY.—A SYNOPSIS OF THE BRITISH FLORA, 


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LINDLEY.—THE THEORY OF HORTICULTURE; 


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LINDLEY.—GUIDE TO ORCHARD AND KITCHEN GARDEN; 


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year. By G. Linpiry, C.M.H.S. Edited by Prof. LiypLey. 8vo. 16s. bds. 


LLOYD.—A TREATISE ON LIGHT AND VISION. 


By the Rev. H. Luoyp, M.A., Fellow of Trin. Coll. Dublin. 8vo. 15s. boards. 


LORIMER.—LETTERS TO A YOUNG MASTER MARINER, 
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LOUDON (MRS.)—THE LADY’S COUNTRY COMPANION; 


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and employments incidental to a residence in the country. On these subjects, indeed, Mrs. Loudon 's companion 
cannot fail to be used with great advantage, and, as a book of reference, will always be valuable.” —ATHEN @UM. 


LOUDON.—SELF-INSTRUCTION =e ae 
For Young Gardeners, Foresters, Bailiffs, Land Stewards, and Farmers; in Arithmetic, Book- 
keeping, Geometry, Mensuration, Practical Tri onometry, Mechanics, Land-Suryeying, 


Levelling, Planning and Mapping, Architectural Be Aimar and Aer te sand 
ut ur- 


Perspective: with Examples shewing their applications to U 
ee. By the late J. C tebpos. PLS. HLS. &c. With a Portrait of Mr. Loudon, and a 
Memoir by Mrs. Loudon. 8vo. {in October. 


LOUDON.—AN ENCYCLOPADIA OF GARDENING 3 ae 
ti i stematic view, the History and Present State of Gardening in all Coun- 
We Ad a1 Doncere in Great Britain: with the Management of the Kitchen 
Garden, the Flower Garden, Laying-out Grounds, &c. By J.C. Loupon, F.L.S. &c. A New 
Edition, enlarged and much improved. 1 large vol. 8vo. with nearly 1,000 Engravings on Wood, 


50s. cloth. 
D 


| 
4 
| 


seep mar enn 


18 CATALOGUE OF NEW WORKS 


QL a a aD co a ne ae NON 


LOUDON.—AN ENCYCLOPEDIA OF TREES AND SHRUBS; 


being the ‘Arboretum et Fruticetum Britannicum” abridged: containing the Hardy Trees 
and Shrubs of Great Britain, Native and Foreign, Scientifically and Popularly Described ; 
with their Propagation, Culture, and Uses in the Arts; and with Engravings of nearly all 
the Species. Adapted for the use of Nurserymen, Gardeners, and Foresters. By J. C. 
Loupon, F.L.S. &c. J large vol. 8yo. with 2000 Engravings on Wood, #2. 10s. cloth. 

The Original Work may be had in 8 vols. 8vo. with above 400 Octavo Plates of Trees, and 
upwards of 2500 Woodcuts, €10, cloth. 


LOUDON.—AN ENCYCLOPEDIA OF AGRICULTURE; 


Comprising the Theory and Practice of the Valuation, Transfer, Laying-out, Improvement, 
and Management of Landed Property, and of the Cultivation and Economy of the Animal and 
Vegetable productions of Agriculture: including all the latest Improvements, a general History 
of Agriculture in all Countries, a Statistical View of its present State, with Suggestions for 
its future progress in the British Isles; and Supplement, bringing down the work to the year 
1844, By J. C. Loupon, F.L.G.Z. and H.S. &e. 5th Edtiion, 1 large vol. 8vo. with upwards 
of 1100 Engravings on Wood, by Branston, £2. 10s. cloth. 

The SuPPLEMENT, bringing down Improvements in the art of Field-Culture from 1831 to 
1844 inclusive, comprising all the previous Supplements, and illustrated with 65 Engrayings 
on Wood, may be had separately, 5s. sewed. 


LOUDON.—AN ENCYCLOPADIA OF PLANTS; 


Including all the Plants which are now found in, or have been introduced into, Great Britain ; 
giving their Natural History, accompanied by such descriptions, engraved figures, and 
elementary details, as may enable a beginner, who is a mere English reader, to discover the 
name of every Plant which he may find in flower, and acquire all the information respecting 
it which is useful and interesting. The Specific Characters by an Eminent Botanist; the 
Drawings by J. D. C. Sowerby, F.L.S. A New Edition, with New Supplement, com- 
prising every desirable particular respecting all the Plants originated in, or introduced into, 
Britain between the first publication of the work, in 1829, and January 1840: with a new 
General Index to the whole work. Edited by J. C. Loupown, prepared by W. H. Baxter, Jun. 
and revised by George Don, F.L.S.; and 800 new Figures of Plants on Wood, from Drawings 
by J. D. C. Sowerby, F.L.S. 1 very large vol. 8vo. with nearly 10,000 Wood Engravings, 
£3. 138. 6d. cloth.—The last Supplement, separately, 8vo. 15s. cloth. 


LOUDON.—HORTUS BRITANNICUS: 


A Catalogue of all the Plants indigenous to or introduced into Britain. The 3d Edition, 
with a NEw SUPPLEMENT, prepared, under the direction of J.C. Loupon, by W. H. BAXTER, 
and revised by GrorGE Don, F.L.S. 8vo. 31s. 6d. cloth. 

The SUPPLEMENT separately, 8yo. 2s. 6d. sewed. 

The LATER SUPPLEMENT separately, 88. 


LOUDON.—AN ENCYCLOPMDIA OF COTTAGE, FARM, AND 


VILLA ARCHITECTURE and FURNITURE. Comtaining Designs for Cottages, Villas, Farm 
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each Design accompanied by Analytical and Critical Remarks illustrative of the Principles of 
Architectural Science and Taste on which it is composed, and General Estimates of the Expense. 
By J. C. Loupon, F.L.S. &c. New Edition, corrected, with a Supplement, containing 160 
additional pages of letter-press and nearly 300 new engravings, 8vo. with more than 2000 
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LOUDON.—HORTUS LIGNOSIS LONDINENSIS; 


Or, a Catalogue of all the Ligneous Plants cultivated in the neighbourhood of London. To 
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LOUDON. —THE SUBURBAN GARDENER AND VILLA 


COMPANION: comprising the Choice of a Villa or Suburban Residence, or of a situation on 
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LOW.—AN INQUIRY INTO THE NATURE OF THE SIMPLE 


BODIES of CHEMISTRY. By Davip Low, Esq. F.R.S.E, Prof. of Agriculture in the 
University of Edinburgh, 8vo. 6s. cloth. 


LOW.—ON THE DOMESTICATED ANIMALS OF GREAT 


BRITAIN ; comprehending the Natural and Economical History of the Species and Breeds; 
Illustrations of the Properties of External Form; and Observations on the Principles and 
Practice of Breeding. By Davip Low, Esq. F.R.S.E. Professor of ‘Agriculture in the Uni- 
versity of Edinburgh; Member of the Royal Academy of Agriculture of Sweden; Corre- 
sponding Member of the Conseil Royal d’Agriculture de France, of the Soci¢té Royal et Cen- 
trale, &c. ; Author of “Elements of Practical Agriculture,” ‘ Illustrations of the Breeds of 
the Domesticated Animals of the British Islands,” “On Landed Property and the Economy of 
Estates,” &c. 8vo. illustrated with Engravings on Wood. ‘(In Oetober. 


d ii 


Bch tinini oven meinne — Bi wie iesddees 


PRINTED FOR LONGMAN, BROWN, AND CO. 19 


INI 


LOW (PROFESSOR).—ON LANDED PROPERTY, 


And the ECONOMY of ESTATES; comprehending the Relation of Landlord and_Tenant, 
and the Principles and Forms of Leases; Farm-Buildings, Enclosures, Drains, Embank- 
ments, and other Rural Works; Minerals; and Woods. By Davip Low, Esq. F.R.S.E. 
Professor of Agriculture in the University of Edinburgh, &c.; Author of “ Elements of 
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LOW.—THE BREEDS OF THE DOMESTICATED ANIMALS 


Of Great Britain Described. By Davip Low, Esq. F.R.S.E. Professor of Agriculture in the 
University of Edinburgh; Member of the Royal Academy of Agriculture of Sweden; Corre- 
sponding Member of the Conseil Royal d’Agriculture de France, of the Société Royale et 
Centrale, &c. &c. The Plates from Drawings by W. Nicholson, R.S.A. reduced from a Series 
of Oil Paintings, executed for the Agricultural Museum of the University of Edinburgh, by 
W. Shiels, R.S.A. 2 vols. atlas quarto, with 56 plates of animals, beautifully coloured after 
Nature, €16.16s. half-bound in morecco.—Or in four separate portions, as follow: 

The OX. 1 vol. atlas quarto, with 22 plates, €6.16s. 6d: half-bound in morocco. 

The SHEEP. 1 vol. atlas quarto, with 21 plates, 6. 16s. 6d. half-bound in morocco. 

The HORSE. 1 vol. atlas quarto, with 8 plates, £3, half-bound in morocco. 

The HOG. i vol. atlas quarto, with 5 plates, 2. 2s. half-bound in morocco. 


LOW.—ELEMENTS OF PRACTICAL AGRICULTURE; 


Comprehending the Cultivation of Plants, the Husbandry of the Domestic Animals, and the 
Economy of the Farm. By D. Low, Esq. F.R.S.E., Prof. of Agriculturein University of Edin- 
burgh. 4th Edit. with Alterations and Additions, and above 200 Woodcuts. 8vo. 21s. cloth. 


MACAULAY.—CRITICAL AND HISTORICAL ESSAYS CON- 


TRIBUTED to The EDINBURGH REVIEW. By the Right Hon. THomas BABINGTON 
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MACAULAY.—LAYS OF ANCIENT ROME. 


Dy the Right Hon. THomas BABINGTON MAcauLay. 6th Edition. Crown 8vo. 10s. 6d. cloth. 


MACKENZIE.—THE PHYSIOLOGY OF VISION. 


By W. Mackenziz, M.D., Lecturer on the Eye in the University of Glasgow. 8vo. with 
Woodcuts, 10s. 6d. boards. 


MACKINNON.—THE HISTORY OF CIVILISATION. 


By WM. ALEXANDER MACKINNON, F.R.S., M.P. for Lymington. 2 vols. 8vo. [In the press. 


MACKINTOSH (SIR JAMES).—THE LIFE OF SIR THOMAS 


MORE. By the Right Hon. Sir James Mackxinrosu. Reprinted from the Cabinet Cyclo- 
pedia ; and intended as a Present Bouk or School Prize. Fcp. 8vo. with Portrait, 5s. cloth ; 
or bound in vellum gilt (old style), 8s. 


MACKINTOSH (SIR JAMES).—SIR JAMES MACKINTOSH’S 


MISCELLANEOUS WORKS; including his Contributions to “The Edinburgh Review.”’ 
Collected and edited by his Son. 3 vols. 8vo. [In the press. 


MACKINTOSH, &.—THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND. 


By Sir James MackinrosH; W. WALLACE, Ksq.; and RoBERT BELL, Esq. 10 vols. fep. 
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M°CULLOCH.—A DICTIONARY, PRACTICAL, THEORETI- 


CAL, AND HISTORICAL, OF COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL NAVIGATION. Illus- 

trated with Maps and Plans. By J. R.M‘CuL.iocnu, Esq. An entirely New Edition, corrected 

throughout, enlarged, and improved. 1 very thick vol. 8vo. 50s. cloth; or 55s. strongly half- 
- bound in russia, with flexible back. 

‘¢ Mr. M‘Culloch’s Commercial Dictionary has for several years been a vade-mecum for merchants, traders, ship- 
owners, and ship-masters, to guide and assist them in conducting the details of their respective occupations ; we need 
not therefore expatiate upon the general merits of this well-known work, in announcing to the mercantile world a 
new, enlarged, and improved edition. The subjects handled ina commercial dictionary are not of a stationary 
but a progressive character, and those who mostly use such repertories are not curious about historical notices or 
theoretical discussions, but concern themselves solely with practical details immediately connected with the present 
moment. The changes made in our commercial policy by the Tariff Act of ey and the late acts for regulating the 
corn and colonial trades, are so multiform, so important, and affect so many articles and interests, that Mr. M‘Culloch 
despaired of introducing them into a supplement of a less size than the original work ; he has therefore reconstructed 
his Dictionary altogether. We have carefully examined this vast work, and are of opinion that the indefatigable 
author has produced a digest of the most useful and authentic information respecting the past and present state of. 
the commerce of Europe and the world at large, and the laws and regulations under which commercial operations 
are carried on, We have not space, nor would it be useful if we had, to enumerate the new subjects treated in the 
edition before us ; it will suffice practical men to be assured that in the course of their business scarcely any com- 
mercial question can arise upon which they will not find useful information in Mr. M‘Culloch’s well-stored pages.” 

From an article on Mr. M‘Culloch’s Dictionary in Tur Trmus newspaper. 


M‘CULLOCH.—A DICTIONARY, GEOGRAPHICAL, STATIS- 


TICAL, AND HISTORICAL, of the various Countries, Places, and Principal Natural Objects 
in the WORLD. By J. R. M‘Cuuiocn, Esq. A New Edition. 2 thick vols. 8vo. illustrated 
with Six Large Maps, #4. cloth. : ‘ 
te? Te nent Articles on the British Empire, England, Ireland, and Scotland, will be printed 
separately, as a Supplement to the former Edition. They comprise a pretty full Account of 
- the Present State of the British Empire. 


20 CATALOGUE OF NEW WORKS 


I a ee 


M‘CULLOCH.—THE LITERATURE OF POLITICAL ECO- 
NOMY; being a Classified Catalogue of the principal Works in the different departments of 


_ Political Economy, with Historical, Critical, and Biographical Notices. By J. R. M°CULLOCH, 
Esq. 8vo. 14s. cloth. 


M‘CULLOCH.—A TREATISE ON THE PRINCIPLES AND 


PRACTICAL INFLUENCE of TAXATION and the FUNDING SYSTEM. By J. R. 
M‘CuuLocnH, Esq. 8vo. 15s. cloth. 


MALTE-BRUN.—A SYSTEM OF UNIVERSAL GEOGRAPHY, 


Founded on the Works of Mairr-Brun and BA LBI, embracing an Historical Sketch of the 
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and a complete Description, from the most recent sources, of the Political and Social Condition 
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MARCET.—-CONVERSATIONS ON CHEMISTRY; 


In which the Elements of that Science are familiarly Explained and Illustrated by Experiments. 
14th Edition, enlarged and corrected. 2 vols. fcp. 8vG. 14s. cloth. 


| MARCET.—CONVERSATIONS ON NATURAL PHILOSOPHY; 


In which the Elements of that Science are familiarly explained, and adapted to the compre- 
hension of Young Persons. 10th Edition, enlarged and corrected by the Author. Fep. 8vo. 


with 23 Plates, 10s. 6d. cloth. 


MARCET.—CONVERSATIONS ON POLITICAL ECONOMY ; 


In which the Elements of that Science are familiarly explained. 7th Edition revised and 
enlarged. Fcp. 8vo. 7s. 6d. cloth. 


MARCKT. — CONVERSATIONS ON VEGETABLE PHYSIO- 


LOGY; comprehending the Elements of Botany, with their application to Agriculture. 
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MARCET.—CONVERSATIONS FOR CHILDREN; 


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MARCET.—CONVERSATIONS ON LANGUAGE, 


For Children. By Mrs. Marcer, Author of ‘* Mary’s Grammar,” ‘“ Conversations on Che- 
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MARCET,—WILLY’S GRAMMAR; 


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‘*A sound and simple work for the earliest ages.” —QuanTERLY REVIEW (of “ Mary’s Grammar’), 


MARCET.—THE GAME OF GRAMMAR, 


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MARCET.—LESSONS ON ANIMALS, VEGETABLES, AND 


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MARCET.—CONVERSATIONS ON THE HISTORY OF ENG- 


LAND, for the Use of Children. By Mrs. Marcer, Author of “Conversations on Che- 
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MARRIAGE GIFT. 


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MARRYAT.—THE SETTLERS IN CANADA. 


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MARRYAT.—MASTERMAN READY; 


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22s. 6d. cloth, 
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PRINTED FOR LONGMAN, BROWN, AND Co. 21 


Ne 


MARRYAT (CAPT.)—THE MISSION ; 


Or, Scenes in Africa. Written for Young People. By Captain Marryat, C.B., Author of 
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12s. cloth. 
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shipwrecked several years previously on the coast below Port Natal, and who, it was supposed, had been carried off 
by the natives. The reader is agreeably surprised by a rapid series of scenes and stirring events in which figure 
conspicuously rhinoceroses, kangaroos, lions, tigers, elephants, snakes, gnus, bufialos, giraffes, quaggas, panthers, 
&c. He follows the adventurous Nimrods, through thirty instructive and entertaining chapters on the natural 
history of the vegetable and animal kingdom, into the extremest depths of the jungle, where 

* Sera sub nocte rudentum 
Hinc exaudiri gemitus ireeque leonum;’ 

and sees the unwieldy elephant twirling his lithe proboscis. In short, he beholds all the birds, beasts, and creeping 
things of the Zoological Gardens, with their domestic manners and habits explained, whilst they roam uncontrolled 
in their native fastnesses.”—Mornine@ Post. 


MARX AND WILLIS.—ON THE DECREASE OF DISEASE 


effected by the Progress of Civilization. By C. F. H. Marx, M.D. Professor of Medicine in 
the University of Gottingen, &c.; and R. Winiis, M.D. Member of the Royal College of 
Physicians, &c. Fcp. 8vo. 4s. cloth. 


MAUNDER.—THE TREASURY OF HISTORY; 


Comprising a General Introductory Outline of Universal History, Ancient and Modern, and a 
Series of separate Histories of every principal Nation that exists; their Rise, Progress, and 
Present Condition, the Moral and Social Character of their respective inhabitants, their 
Religion, Manners, and Customs, &c. By SamuEL MaunpDER. 2d Edition. 1 thick vol. 
fcp. 8vo. 10s, cloth; bound in roan, 12s. 


MAUNDER.—THE TREASURY OF KNOWLEDGE, 


And LIBRARY of REFERENCE: in Two Parts. 16th Edition, thoroughly revised and 
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*,* The principal contents of the present new and thoroughly revised edition of “ The 
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Distinctions, and Exercises ; anew Universal Gazetteer ; a compendious Classical Dictionary; 
an Analysis of History and Chronology; a Dictionary of Law Terms; a new Synopsis of the 
British Peerage ; and various useful Tabular Addenda. 


MAUNDER.—THE SCIENTIFIC & LITERARY TREASURY ; 


A new and popular Encyclopedia of Science and the Belles-Lettres ; including all Branches of 
Science, and every Subject connected with Literature and Art. The whole written in a familiar 
style, adapted to the comprehension of all persons desirous of acquiring information on the 
subjects comprised in the work, and also adapted for a Manual of convenient Reference to the 
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Frontispiece, 10s. cloth; bound in roan, 12s. 


MAUNDER.—THE BIOGRAPHICAL TREASURY 5 


Consisting of Memoirs, Sketches, and brief Notices of above 12,000 Eminent Persons of all Age. 
and Nations, from the Earliest Period of History; forming a new and compiete Dictionary 
of Universal Biography. By SamuEL MAunpER. 5th Edition, revised throughout, and 
containing a copious Supplement, brought down to December, 1844. 1 thick volume. Fep. 8yo. 
with engraved Frontispiece, 10s. cloth; bound in roan, 12s. 


j e 
MAUNDER.—THE UNIVERSAL CLASS-BOOK : | 
A new Series of Reading Lessons (original and selected) for Every Day in the Year; each 
Lesson recording some important Event in General History, Biography, &c. which happened 
on the day of the month under which it is placed, or detailing, in familiar language, inte- 
resting facts in Science; also a variety of Descriptive and Narrative Pieces, interspersed with 
Poetical Gleanings: Questions for Examination being appended to each day’s Lesson, and the 
whole carefully adapted to Practical Tuition. By SamMUEL MAUNDER, Author of “ The 
Treasury of Knowledge.” 2d Edition, revised. 12mo. 5s. bound. 


MICHELET (J.)—PRIESTS, WOMEN, AND FAMILIES. 


By J. Micuzier. Translated from the French (3d edition), with the Author’s permission, 
by C. Cocks, Bachelier-és-Lettres, and Professor (breveté) of the Living Languages in the 
Royal Colleges of France. Post 8vo. 9s. cloth. 

“A book uniting many excellencies: the interest of the memoir, the fervency of a théological enquiry, and the 
pungency and force of a dissection of human nature. We recommend it most earnestly to our readers, as not only 
powerful and profound, but as written so clearly and ageeeably that the most volatile and inattentive will comprehend 
and enjoy the remarkable disclosures made in its pages.”—JERROLD’s MAGAZINE. 


MILNER (REVS. J. & I.)—THE HISTORY OF THE CHURCH 


of CHRIST. By the Rev. Josep Miuner, A.M. With Additions and Corrections by the 
late Rev. Isaac MiuyeR, D.D. F.R.S., Dean of Carlisle, and President of Queen’s College, 
Cambridge. A New Edition. 4 vols. Svo. £2. 8s. boards. 


MONTGOMERY’S (JAMES) POETICAL WORKS. at 
New and only Complete Edition. With some additional Poems, and Autobiographica 
Prefaces. Collected and Edited by Mr. Monr@oMERyY. 4 vols. fep. Svo. with Portrait, and 
Seven other beautifully-engraved Plates, 20s. cloth; or bound in morocco, 36s. 


—iml--z~me~amwous 


222 CATALOGUE OF NEW WORKS 


MOORE’S POETICAL WORKS; 


Containing the Author’s recent Introduction and Notes. Complete in one volume, uniform 

with Lord Byron’s Poems. With a New Portrait, by George Richmond, engraved in the line 

manner, and a View of Sloperton Cottage, the Residence of the Poet, by Thomas Creswick, 

Medium 8vo. 21s. cloth; or 42s. bound in morocco, in the best manner, by Hayday. 

*,* Also, an Edition in 10 vols. fcp. 8vo. with Portrait, and 19 Plates £2. 10s. cloth 
morocco, 4. 10s. 


MOORE’S LALLA ROOKH. 


Twentieth Edition. Medium 8vo. illustrated with 13 Engravings finished in the highest style 
of Art, 21s. cloth; morocco, 35s; or, with India Proof Plates, 42s. cloth. 


MOORE’S LALLA ROOKH. 


Twenty-firstEdition. Fep. 8vo. with Four Engravings, from Paintings by Westall, 10s. 6d. 
cloth ; or, handsomely bound in morocco, in the best manner, 14s. 


MOORE’S IRISH MELODIES. 


Illustrated by D. Macuisg, R.A. Imp. 8vo. with 160 Designs engraved on Steel, £3. 3s. bds. ; 
or Proof Impressions, 6. 6s. boards. [In October. 

*,* This work has been some years in preparation, and will be ready for publication in 
October. The text, with an Ornamental Border to each page, as well as the other Designs, 
are all engraved on steel; and it is believed that the novelty of the mode of production, 
combined with the care bestowed in the execution of every part of this elaborate work, will 
render it one of the most interesting volumes that have ever appeared. 


MOORE’S [IRISH MELODIES. 


Fifteenth Edition. Fcp. 8vo. with Engraved Title and Vignette, 10s. cloth ; or bound in 
morocco, in the best manner, 13s. 6d. 


MOORE.—THE HISTORY OF IRELAND. 


By Tuomas Moors, Esq. 4 vols. fcp. 8vo., with Vignette Titles, 24s. cloth. 


MORAL OF FLOWERS. 


3d Edition. Royal 8vo. with 24 beautifully-coloured Engravings, £1. 10s. half-bound. 


MORTON.—A VETERINARY TOXICOLOGICAL CHART, 


Containing those Agents known to cause Death in the Horse; with the Symptoms, Antidotes, 
Action on the Tissues, and Tests. By W. J.T. Morron. .12mo. 6s. in cas + onrollers, 8s. 6d, 


MORTON.—A MANUAL OF PHARMACY, 


For the Student in Veterinary Medicine; containing the Substances employed at the Royal 
Veterinary College, with an attempt at their classification, and the Pharmacopeeia of that In- 
stitution. By W. J.T. Morton. 3d Edition. 12mo. 10s. cloth. 


MOSELEY.—THE MECHANICAL PRINCIPLES OF ENGI- 


NEERING AND ARCHITECTURE, By the Rey. H. MoseE.ey, M.A. F.R.S., Professor of 


Natural Philosophy and Astronomy in King’s College, London; and Author of Illustrations 
of Mechanics,” &c. 8vo. with Woodcuts and Diagrams, 24s. cloth. 


MOSELEY.—ILLUSTRATIONS OF PRACTICAL MECHANICS. 


By the Rev. H. Mose.ey, M.A., Professor of Natural Philosophy and Astronomy in King’s 
College, London; being the First Volume of the Lilustrations of Science by the Professors of 
King’s College. Fep. 8vo. with numerous Woodcuts, 8s. cloth. 


MULLER.—INTRODUCTION TO A SCIENTIFIC SYSTEM 


of MYTHOLOGY. By C. O. Minter, Author of “The History and Antiquities of the 
Doric Race,”’ &c. Translated from the German by John Leitch. 8vo. uniform with ‘ Miiller’s 
Dorians,”’ 12s. cloth. 


MURRAY.—ENCYCLOPAIDIA OF GEOGRAPHY; 


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WELSFORD (HENRY).—ON THE ORIGIN AND RAMIFICA- 
TIONS OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE; preceded by an Inquiry into the Primitive Seats, 
Early Migrations, and Final Settlements, of the principal European Nations. By Henry 
WELSFORD. 8vo. 10s. 6d. cloth. 


WHITE’S COMPENDIUM OF THE VETERINARY ART; 


Containing Plain and Concise Observations on the Construction and Management of the 
Stable, &c. 17th Edition, entirely reconstructed, with considerable Additions and Altera- 
tions, bringing the work up tothe present state of Veterinary Science. By W. C. SPOONER, 
Veterinary Surgeon, &c. &c. *8vo. with coloured Plate, 16s. cloth. 


WHITE’S COMPENDIUM OF CATTLE MEDICINE; 


Or, Practical Observations on the Disorders of Cattle and other Domestic Animals, except 
the Horse. 6th Edition, re-arranged, with copious Additions and Notes, by W. C. SpooNeER, 
Vet. Surgeon, Author of a “Treatise on the Influenza,’’ &c. 8vo. 9s. cloth. 


WIGAN (DR. A. LJ—THE DUALITY OF THE MIND,. 


Proved by the Structure, Functions, and Diseases of the Brain, and by the Phenomena of 
Mental Derangement; and shewn to be essential to Moral Responsibility. With an Appendix : 
—1. On the Influence of Religion on Insanity; 2. Conjectures on the Nature of the Mental 
Operations; 3. On the Management of Lunatic Asylums. By A.L.WiGANn, M.D. 8vo. 12s. cl. 


1 : 

WILBERFORCE (W.)—A PRACTICAL VIEW OF THE PRE- 
VAILING RELIGIOUS SYSTEMS of PROFESSED CHRISTIANS, in the Higher and 
Middle Classes in this Country, contrasted with Real Christianity. By Wm. WILBERFORCE, 
Esq. M.P. for the county of York. 17th Edition. 8vo. 8s. boards. 

*,* Nineteenth Edition. 12mo. 4s. 6d. boards. 


WILKINSON.—THE ENGINES OF WAR, &. 


Being a History of Ancient and Modern Projectile Instruments and Engines of Warfare and 
Sporting; including the Manufacture of Fire-Arms, the History and Manufacture of Gun- 
powder, of Swords, and of the cause of the Damascus Figure in Sword Blades, with some 


Observations of Bronze, &c. By H. WILkinson, M.R.A.S. 8vo. 9s. cloth. 


WILLIS (N. P.J—DASHES AT LIFE WITH A FREE PENCIL. 


By N. P. WILLIs, Esq., Author of “ Pencillings by the Way,” “ Inklings of Adventure,” 


&c. 3 vols. post 8vo. 31s. 6d. boards. : ; 
“ An exceedingly amusing book,—dashed off with the freest of pencils.”—BzELL’s MESSENGER. 


WILLOUGHBY (LADY).—A DIARY, 


Purporting to be by the LADY WILLOUGHBY, of the Reign of Charles I. ; embracing some 
Passages of her Domestic History from 1635 to 1648. 3d Edition. Square fcp. 8vo. 8s. boards; 
or 18s. bound in morocco by Hayday. : : : : 
*,* This volume is printed and bound in the style of the period to which The Diary refers. 
“The great charm of the book, which makes it almost impossible to lay it aside until wholly perused, is its 
peautiful simplicity, united to the most touching pathos, ever and anon relieved by little notices of household cares, 
and sweet pictures of domestic felicity.” —ScoTsMAN. 


ZUMPT (PROF.)~A GRAMMAR OF THE LATIN LANGUAGE. 


By C. G. Zumpr, Ph. D. Professor in the University, aud Member of the Royal Academy of 
Berlin. Translated from the Ninth Edition of the original, and adapted to the use of English 
Students, by Leonnarp Scumirz, Ph. D. ; late of the University of Bonn; with numerous 
additions and corrections by the Author. 8vo. 14s. cloth. 
“ 'Phus, beyond all question, is the work of Dr. Schmitz henceforward the authorised version of Professor Zumpt’s 
Grammar ; a book which deserves its great celebrity, and the high esteem in which it is held by the = scholars.’’ 
UXAMINER. 


WILSON AND OGILVY, SKINNER STEEET, SNOWHILL, LONDON, 


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